inversquare
- 17
- 0
z\in\mathbb C
I imagine it is not too difficult, I'm just missing something. I need to use the limit definition to prove it,
lim_{Δz\rightarrow 0} \frac{f(z+Δz)-f(z)}{Δz}
Alternatively, using Cauchy-Riemann conditions, am I correct to assume
u(x,y) = x^2 + y^2 and v(x,y) = 0
Then,
u_x ≠ v_y and u_y ≠ - v_x
?
Thanks!
Chad
I imagine it is not too difficult, I'm just missing something. I need to use the limit definition to prove it,
lim_{Δz\rightarrow 0} \frac{f(z+Δz)-f(z)}{Δz}
Alternatively, using Cauchy-Riemann conditions, am I correct to assume
u(x,y) = x^2 + y^2 and v(x,y) = 0
Then,
u_x ≠ v_y and u_y ≠ - v_x
?
Thanks!
Chad
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