Jensen's formula

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In complex analysis, Jensen's formula relates the average magnitude of an analytic function on a circle with the number of its zeros inside the circle. The formula was introduced by Template:Harvs and forms an important statement in the study of entire functions.

Formal statement

Suppose that f is an analytic function in a region in the complex plane which contains the closed disk 𝔻r of radius r>0 about the origin, a1,a2,,an are the zeros of f in the interior of 𝔻r (repeated according to their respective multiplicity), and that f(0)0.

Jensen's formula states that[1]

log|f(0)|=k=1nlog(r|ak|)+12π02πlog|f(reiθ)|dθ.

This formula establishes a connection between the moduli of the zeros of f in the interior of 𝔻r and the average of log|f(z)| on the boundary circle |z|=r, and can be seen as a generalisation of the mean value property of harmonic functions. Namely, if f has no zeros in 𝔻r, then Jensen's formula reduces to

log|f(0)|=12π02πlog|f(reiθ)|dθ,

which is the mean-value property of the harmonic function log|f(z)|.

An equivalent statement of Jensen's formula that is frequently used is

12π02πlog|f(reiθ)|dθlog|f(0)|=0rn(t)tdt

where n(t) denotes the number of zeros of f in the disc of radius t centered at the origin.

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Applications

Jensen's formula can be used to estimate the number of zeros of an analytic function in a circle. Namely, if f is a function analytic in a disk of radius R centered at z0 and if |f| is bounded by M on the boundary of that disk, then the number of zeros of f in a circle of radius r<R centered at the same point z0 does not exceed

1log(R/r)logM|f(z0)|.

Jensen's formula is an important statement in the study of value distribution of entire and meromorphic functions. In particular, it is the starting point of Nevanlinna theory, and it often appears in proofs of Hadamard factorization theorem, which requires an estimate on the number of zeros of an entire function.

Jensen's formula is also used to prove a generalization of Paley-Wiener theorem for quasi-analytic functions with r1.Template:Sfn In the field of control theory (in particular: spectral factorization methods) this generalization is often referred to as the Paley–Wiener condition.Template:Sfn

Generalizations

Jensen's formula may be generalized for functions which are merely meromorphic on 𝔻r. Namely, assume that

f(z)=zlg(z)h(z),

where g and h are analytic functions in 𝔻r having zeros at a1,,an𝔻r{0} and b1,,bm𝔻r{0} respectively, then Jensen's formula for meromorphic functions states that

log|g(0)h(0)|=log|rmnla1anb1bm|+12π02πlog|f(reiθ)|dθ.

Jensen's formula is a consequence of the more general Poisson–Jensen formula, which in turn follows from Jensen's formula by applying a Möbius transformation to z. It was introduced and named by Rolf Nevanlinna. If f is a function which is analytic in the unit disk, with zeros a1,a2,,an located in the interior of the unit disk, then for every z0=r0eiφ0 in the unit disk the Poisson–Jensen formula states that

log|f(z0)|=k=1nlog|z0ak1a¯kz0|+12π02πPr0(φ0θ)log|f(eiθ)|dθ.

Here,

Pr(ω)=nr|n|einω

is the Poisson kernel on the unit disk. If the function f has no zeros in the unit disk, the Poisson-Jensen formula reduces to

log|f(z0)|=12π02πPr0(φ0θ)log|f(eiθ)|dθ,

which is the Poisson formula for the harmonic function log|f(z)|.

See also

References

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Sources