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Cauchy's Integral Formula

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Cauchy's Integral Formula is a fundamental result in complex analysis. It states that if U is a subset of the complex plane containing a simple counterclockwise loop C and the region bounded by C, and f is a complex-differentiable function on U, then for any z_0 in the interior of the region bounded by C, \frac{1}{2\pi i} \int\limits_C \frac{f(z)}{z- z_0}dz = f(z_0) .

Proof

Let D denote the interior of the region bounded by C. Let C_r denote a simple counterclockwise loop about z_0 of radius r. Since the interior of the region bounded by C is an open set, there is some R such that C_r \subset D for all r \in (0, R). For such values of r, \int\limits_C \frac{f(z)}{z-z_0}dz = \int\limits_{C_r}\frac{f(z)}{z-z_0}dz , by application of Cauchy's Integral Theorem.

Since f is differentiable at z_0, for any \epsilon we may pick an arbitarily small r>0 such that \left\lvert \frac{f(z)-f(z_0)}{z-z_0} - f'(z_0) \right\rvert< \epsilon whenever \lvert z - z_0 \rvert \le r. Let us parameterize C_r as h(t) = r e^{it}+ z_0, for t\in [0,2\pi]. Since \int\limits_{C_r}f'(z_0)dz = 0 (again by Cauchy's Integral Theorem), it follows that \begin{align*}\biggl\lvert \int\limits_{C_r} \frac{f(z)}{z-z_0}dz -\int\limits_{C_r} \frac{f(z_0)}{z-z_0}dz \biggr\rvert &amp... Since \epsilon and r can simultaneously become arbitrarily small, it follows that \begin{align*}\int\limits_C \frac{f(z)}{z-z_0}dz &= \int\limits_{C_r} \frac{f(z_0)}{z- z_0}dz \\&= f(z_0) \int\limits... which is equivalent to the desired theorem. \blacksquare

Consequences

By induction, we see that the nth derivative of f at z_0 is f^{(n)}(z_0) = \frac{n!}{2\pi i} \int\limits_C\frac{f(z)}{(z-z_0)^{n+1}}dz, for n>0. In particular, the nth derivative exists at z_0, for all n>0. In other words, if a function f is complex-differentiable on some region, then it is infinitely differentiable on the interior of that region.

Since the (n+1)th derivative exists in general, it follows that the nth derivative is continuous. This is not true for functions of real variables! For instance the real function f(x) = \begin{cases} x \sin(1/x), & x \neq 0 \\ 0, & x=0 \end{cases} is everywhere differentiable, but its derivative is mysteriously not continuous at x=0. In complex analysis, the mystery disappears: the function z\sin(1/z) = z\frac{e^{i/z} - e^{-i/z}}{2i} has an essential singularity at z=0, so we can't establish a derivative there in any case.

The theorem is useful for estimating a function (or its nth derivative) at a point based on the behavior of the function around the point. For instance, the theorem yields an easy proof that holomorphic functions are in fact analytic.

See also

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