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Liouville's Theorem (complex analysis)

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In complex analysis, Liouville's Theorem states that a bounded holomorphic function on the entire complex plane must be constant. It is named after Joseph Liouville. Picard's Little Theorem is a stronger result.

Contents

Statement

Let f : \mathbb{C} \to \mathbb{C} be a holomorphic function. Suppose there exists some real number M \ge 0 such that \lvert f(z) \rvert \le M for all z \in \mathbb{C}. Then f is a constant function.

Proof

We use Cauchy's Integral Formula.

Pick some z_0 \in \mathbb{C}; let C_R denote the simple counterclockwise circle of radius R centered at z_0. Then \lvert f'(z_0) \rvert = \biggl\lvert \frac{1}{2\pi i}\int_C -\frac{f(z)}{(z-z_0)^2}dz \biggr\rvert \le \frac{M}{R^2} . Since f is holomorphic on the entire complex plane, R can be arbitrarily large. It follows that f'(z) = 0, for every point z \in \mathbb{C}. Now for any two complex numbers A and B, f(B) - f(A) = \int_{A}^B f'(z)dz  = 0 , so f is constant, as desired. \blacksquare

Extensions

It follows from Liouville's theorem if f is a non-constant entire function, then the image of f is dense in \mathbb{C}; that is, for every z_0 \in \mathbb{C}, there exists some z \in \text{Im}\,f that is arbitrarily close to z_0.

Proof

Suppose on the other hand that there is some z_0 not in the image of f, and that there is a positive real \epsilon such that \text{Im}\,f has no point within \epsilon of z_0. Then the function g(z) = \frac{1}{f(z) - z_0} is holomorphic on the entire complex plane, and it is bounded by 1/\epsilon. It is therefore constant. Therefore f is constant. \blacksquare

Picard's Little Theorem offers the stronger result that if f avoids two points in the plane, then it is constant. It is possible for an entire function to avoid a single point, as \exp(z) avoids 0.


See also

Looking for a challenging geometry text? Preparing for MATHCOUNTS or the AMC exams? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Introduction to Geometry by Richard Rusczyk.
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