laura_a
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Homework Statement
I have this question in my text that I'm trying to understand, I have trouble with this style of questions (more proofs than actual working with real functions)
It says
Let f be an entire function such that |f(z)| <= A|z| for all z, where A is a fixed positive number. Show that f(z)=a_1 * z where a_1 is a complex constant
Homework Equations
The suggestion is to use Cauchy's Inequality to show that to 2nd deriv is zero everywhere in the plane. Note also that M_R in Cauchy;s Ineq. is <= A(|z_0| + R)
Now my understanding of Cauchy's Inequality is limited but here is what I have as the formula
|f^(n) (z_0) <= (n! * M_R) / R^n (n = 1,2,3...)
The Attempt at a Solution
Now from the last section in the text I was working with Cauchy Integral Formula (I haven't gotten to residues yet) so I know what all the terms mean, but because the question is a bit airy fairy I'm not sure what the f(z) is or how to plug the given info into the equation. Any hints would be gratefully accepted :)