asi123
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I need to Integrate this thing in order to find the function?HallsofIvy said:Integrate by letting u= z2+ 4.
asi123 said:I need to Integrate this thing in order to find the function?
What do you mean by "letting u= z2+ 4"?
Thanks a lot.
Gregg said:Integration by substitution?
Dick said:But does log(z^2+4) define an analytic function on the plane minus those two points? Can you pick values of the log that make it continuous everywhere? What happens with the 'function' log(z) as you move in a circle around the origin?
asi123 said:Yeah right, it's not analytic unless you take off the entire x negative axis.
So does that mean that such analytic function does not exist?
Thanks a lot.
Dick said:That's the general picture, yes. You can write the antiderivative as log(z+2i)+log(z-2i). You have exactly the same kind of problem as log(z) has around the points +/-2i.