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The Road to Reality Study Notes: Difference between revisions

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=== 7.3 Power series from complex smoothness ===
=== 7.3 Power series from complex smoothness ===
The example in section 7p2 is a particular case for the well-known Cauchy Formula, which allows us to know what the function is doing at the origin (or another general point p) by what it is doing at a set of points surrounding the origin (or the general point p). <math display="block">\frac{1}{2πi}\oint\frac{f(z)}{z-p}dz=f(p)</math>
A higher-order version of this formula allows us to inspect n number of derivatives with the same relationship.
If we use this to provide the definition of a derivative at a point, then we can construct a Maclaurin formula f(z) using the derivatives in the coefficients of the terms.
This can be shown to sum to f(z), thereby showing the function has an actual nth derivative at the origin.  This concludes the argument showing that complex smoothness in a region surrounding the origin implies that the function is also holomorphic. Penrose notes that neither the premise (f(z) is complex-smooth) nor the conclusion (f(z) is analytic) contains contour integration or multivaluedness of a complex logarithm, yet these ingredients are essential for finding the route to the answer and that this is a ‘wonderful example of the way that mathematicians can often obtain their results’.
=== 7.4 Analytic continuation ===
=== 7.4 Analytic continuation ===


== Chapter 8 Riemann surfaces and complex mappings ==
== Chapter 8 Riemann surfaces and complex mappings ==
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