Contour integral with poles on contour

In summary: The antiderivative of:$$\int \frac{\sin(x)\cos(x)}{\sin(x)+\cos(s)}$$is:$$\int_{-1}^1 \frac{1}{x}dx=0$$
  • #1
ShayanJ
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In the process of calculating the integral [itex] \int_0^{2\pi}\frac{\sin{x} \cos{x}}{\sin{x}+\cos{x}}dx [/itex] by contour integration,I got the following:

[itex]
-\frac{1}{2}[ \LARGE{\oint} \large{\frac{z^2}{(1-i)z^2+i+1}}dz-\LARGE{\oint}\large{\frac{z^{-2}}{(1-i)z^2+i+1}}dz] [/itex]

Where the contour of integration for both integrals is the unit circle centered at the origin. The poles are at [itex]z=\pm i \sqrt{i}=\pm \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}(1-i) [/itex]. As you can see, [itex] |z|=1 [/itex] and so they're on the contour.

My question is,how should I treat such poles?
Should I exclude them and calculate the integrals as [itex] \pi i \sum_i r_i [/itex] or should include them and use [itex] 2 \pi i \sum_i r_i [/itex] ?
How should I decide with what sign each of the residues should appear in the calculation of integrals?

Thanks
 
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  • #2
The initial integral doesn't look well-defined, it has a pole inside.
 
  • #3
A pole on the contour is << equivalent to 1/2 pole >>
That is : Enclose the pole inside the contour with a small half-circle. The corresponding angle is pi instead of 2*pi.
This is also true for a pole located on an angular point, with the corresponding angle.
 
  • #4
mfb said:
The initial integral doesn't look well-defined, it has a pole inside.

Yeah...it'll diverge...I wasn't careful about that.
But how does this divergence show up in contour integration?

A pole on the contour is << equivalent to 1/2 pole >>
That is : Enclose the pole inside the contour with a small half-circle. The corresponding angle is pi instead of 2*pi.
This is also true for a pole located on an angular point, with the corresponding angle.
I did that...but it didn't agree with the result that maple gave me(which is finite!).Although wolframalpha seems to be aware of its divergence.
 
  • #5
Shyan said:
In the process of calculating the integral [itex] \int_0^{2\pi}\frac{\sin{x} \cos{x}}{\sin{x}+\cos{x}}dx [/itex] by contour integration,I got the following:

[itex]
-\frac{1}{2}[ \LARGE{\oint} \large{\frac{z^2}{(1-i)z^2+i+1}}dz-\LARGE{\oint}\large{\frac{z^{-2}}{(1-i)z^2+i+1}}dz] [/itex]

Where the contour of integration for both integrals is the unit circle centered at the origin. The poles are at [itex]z=\pm i \sqrt{i}=\pm \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}(1-i) [/itex]. As you can see, [itex] |z|=1 [/itex] and so they're on the contour.

My question is,how should I treat such poles?
Should I exclude them and calculate the integrals as [itex] \pi i \sum_i r_i [/itex] or should include them and use [itex] 2 \pi i \sum_i r_i [/itex] ?
How should I decide with what sign each of the residues should appear in the calculation of integrals?

Thanks

Whenever you make such a transformation on an integral and you create simple poles on the contour, then the original integral must be interpreted in the Cauchy principal-valued sense. That is, we should consider:

[tex]\text{PV}\int_0^{2\pi} \frac{\sin(x) \cos(x)}{\sin(x)+\cos(x)}dx[/tex]

with poles at ##3\pi/4## and ##7\pi /4##. Now, how about a nice plot showing little indentations around those poles of your particular orientation around them. Either way won't matter as long as we do the calculations correctly in fact, why not do one one way and the other the other way. That'll still work won't it? And while you're at it, review that theorem in your textbook about how to compute the integral over an indentation around a simple pole as the radius goes to zero being equal to ##\theta i r## where ##\theta## is the radial angle extended by the indentation.

Oh yeah, color-code them so we know which one's which.
 
Last edited:
  • #6
jackmell said:
Whenever you make such a transformation on an integral and you create simple poles on the contour, then the original integral must be interpreted in the Cauchy principal-valued sense. That is, we should consider:

[tex]\text{PV}\int_0^{2\pi} \frac{\sin(x) \cos(x)}{\sin(x)+\cos(x)}dx[/tex]

with poles at ##3\pi/4## and ##7\pi /4##. Now, how about a nice plot showing little indentations around those poles of your particular orientation around them. Either way won't matter as long as we do the calculations correctly in fact, why not do one one way and the other the other way. That'll still work won't it? And while you're at it, review that theorem in your textbook about how to compute the integral over an indentation around a simple pole as the radius goes to zero being equal to ##\theta i r## where ##\theta## is the radial angle extended by the indentation.

Oh yeah, color-code them so we know which one's which.

If I include the poles in the contour and do it with half circles,I'll get zero which seems to be wrong!
 
  • #7
Shyan said:
If I include the poles in the contour and do it with half circles,I'll get zero which seems to be wrong!

It is zero in the same way that:

$$\text{PV}\int_{-1}^1 \frac{1}{x}dx=0$$

Ok, compute the antiderivative of:

$$\int \frac{\sin(x)\cos(x)}{\sin(x)+\cos(s)}$$

and using that antiderivative, prove that the principle value of that integral is zero by taking the appropriate limiting cases.
 
  • #8
Ok, let's do it as follows:
First,I choose a contour which avoids including the poles.So the integrals divides to five integrals on five different parts of the contour but because the poles are not included,We have [itex] I_1+I_2+I_3+I_4+I_5=0 [/itex]. The PV is [itex] I_1+I_3+I_5=-I_2-I_4 [/itex] so we only have to calculate the integrals around the poles as the part of the contour around them goes to zero.But the boundaries of the integrals around the poles become equal as the radius goes to zero and so the integrals go to zero and we will have zero for the PV.
Was it good enough?
 
  • #9
Shyan said:
Ok, let's do it as follows:
First,I choose a contour which avoids including the poles.So the integrals divides to five integrals on five different parts of the contour but because the poles are not included,We have [itex] I_1+I_2+I_3+I_4+I_5=0 [/itex]. The PV is [itex] I_1+I_3+I_5=-I_2-I_4 [/itex] so we only have to calculate the integrals around the poles as the part of the contour around them goes to zero.But the boundaries of the integrals around the poles become equal as the radius goes to zero and so the integrals go to zero and we will have zero for the PV.
Was it good enough?

Absolutely not. But that's ok. I'm not your teacher. Lemme's see, what would I do if I was and you pulled that stunt on me? Hummm . . . well, I'd tell you that in the real world, outside of class rooms and nicely-worded problems in textbooks, the world is messy, unkind, brutal, and unforgiving and what you said up there is not good enough to fight them off. What you need to be to survive in that world, is to be direct, explicit, exact, and comprehensive in your dealings with life. Now, this problem won't help much in that endeavor, but if you attacked it as such, it would give you practice for one day when it really counts.

So not. Rather plots, color-coded, integrals, residues, explanations, and rigor to show unequivocally that it is such.
 

What is a contour integral with poles on contour?

A contour integral with poles on contour is an integral that is evaluated over a closed curve in the complex plane, where the integrand has singularities (poles) on the curve. These poles can cause the integral to be undefined, and special techniques are needed to evaluate it.

How do you find the poles on a contour?

The poles on a contour can be found by setting the denominator of the integrand equal to zero and solving for the values of the variable that make it zero. These values are the poles, and the contour should be chosen to include them.

What is the residue theorem?

The residue theorem is a powerful tool used in evaluating contour integrals with poles on contour. It states that the value of a contour integral is equal to the sum of the residues of the poles inside the contour. The residue of a pole is the coefficient of the term with the highest power in the Laurent series expansion of the integrand around that pole.

When can a contour integral with poles on contour be evaluated using the residue theorem?

A contour integral with poles on contour can be evaluated using the residue theorem when the function being integrated is analytic everywhere inside and on the contour, except for a finite number of isolated singularities (poles). Additionally, the contour must be chosen to include all of these singularities.

How do you calculate the residue of a pole?

To calculate the residue of a pole, you can use the formula: Res(f(z), z0) = limz→z0 (z-z0)f(z). This means taking the limit of the function multiplied by (z-z0) as z approaches the value of the pole. Another way to calculate residues is by using the Cauchy integral formula, which relates the value of a contour integral to the value of the function at the pole.

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