Does a Holomorphic Function Extend Continuously to the Unit Circle?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the question of whether a holomorphic function defined in the unit disk can extend continuously to the unit circle while satisfying a specific condition on the boundary. Participants explore implications of holomorphicity, continuity, and properties of integrals in relation to this problem.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that if such a holomorphic function existed, it would map the unit circle to itself and the unit disk onto itself, leading to a contradiction regarding differentiability.
  • Another participant questions whether the continuity of the function implies the continuity of the integral, particularly in the context of integrating around circles approaching the unit circle.
  • There is a proposal that if the function had an analytic extension to the boundary, integration along a specific curve would yield a contradiction, but the applicability of integration theorems for analytic functions is debated.
  • Some participants invoke the maximum and minimum modulus principles, suggesting that if the function is holomorphic and continuous on the boundary, it must achieve its maximum and minimum on the boundary, leading to the conclusion that the modulus of the function must equal one.
  • Questions arise regarding the conditions under which the minimum modulus principle applies and whether the function can have a minimum in the disk.
  • Concerns are raised about the continuity of integrals and whether the winding number around the origin is consistent with the properties of the function being discussed.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the implications of the maximum and minimum modulus principles, the role of integrals, and the conditions under which the function can be considered to have certain properties. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing perspectives on the problem.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the dependence on the definitions of holomorphicity and continuity, as well as unresolved questions about the continuity of integrals in this context.

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Show that there is no holomorphic function f in the unit disc D that extends continuously to |z|=1 such that f(z) =1/z for |z|=1

Some thoughts that might not be relevant:
If such f existed then, I can see that f maps the unit circle to the unit circle and the unit disc onto the unit disc.
On |z|=1 f would be equal to the conjugate function which is not differentiable anywhere.

I'm kind of stuck. I appreciate any suggestions.
 
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Edit: wow it's way too late. Think integration
 
Do you mean that if I integrate f on circles with radii approaching 1, I get
0 = int f approaches int 1/z =2ipi ?

but does the continuity of f imply the continuity of the integral like that?
 
Office_Shredder said:
Think integration

Does integration work with this problem? I assume you had an argument like the following in mind:
If f had an analytic extension to \partial D, then take the curve \gamma:[0,1] \rightarrow \mathbb{C} given by \gamma(t)=\exp(2 \pi i t). Notice that \int_{\gamma} f = 2\pi i by calculation but that \int_{\gamma} f = 0 since f is analytic. This is a contradiction so f cannot have such an analytic extension.
But since the extension of f to \partial D is only continuous, none of the integration theorems for analytic functions will work here. The notion of what it means for f to be analytic on D \cup \partial D is ill-defined as well, since D \cup \partial D is not open. Maybe I am just missing something here and you found a way to do this with integration (which would be pretty neat).

I am pretty sure that you can do this without integration though. Notice that the maximum/minimum modulus principle apply since f is holomorphic on D and continuous on \partial D. This means |f| assumes its maximum and minimum values on \partial D; in particular, it follows that |f|=1 on D. From here you should be able to derive a contradiction.
 
Thank you jgens.
About your approach, you say f doesn't have a min in D.
How do we know 0 is not a min ?
 
symbol0 said:
About your approach, you say f doesn't have a min in D.

I said |f|=1 on D which means that every point of D is a minimum for |f|.
 
I want to understand how do you conclude |f| = 1 on D.
I know f cannot have a maximum in D. So |f|<1 on D.
...what else?
 
symbol0 said:
I want to understand how do you conclude |f| = 1 on D.
I know f cannot have a maximum in D. So |f|<1 on D.
...what else?

The maximum modulus principle says that |f| \leq 1 on D. The minimum modulus principle says that 1 \leq |f|. This means that |f|=1. There is not much to it.
 
To get the minimum you can take 1/f as long as f us non-zero.

If you integrate around circles of radius r and let r approach one you can get a contradiction can't you?
 
  • #10
To jgens: you say 1 leq |f|. How do we know f is not a function like f(z)=z which has a minimum in D ?

To office shredder: to get that contradiction don't we need to know that integrals are continuous ? is that a fact?
 
  • #11
wouldn't the winding number around the origin be positive? whereas it seems to be -1.
 
  • #12
I don't follow you mathwonk.
If the curve is going counterclockwise, the winding number is greater or equal to 0.
And how is that related to the question?
 

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