Slit plane: Difference between revisions

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{{particular simply connected domain}}
==Definition==
==Definition==



Latest revision as of 19:18, 18 May 2008

This article defines a particular simply connected domain in

C

, the complex numbers
View a complete list of particular simply connected domains

Definition

The slit plane is defined as the following open subset of C:

C{zRz0}

In other words, it is the complement in C of the half-line of nonpositive reals.

The slit plane is a star-like domain, with 1 as a star point. In particular, it is simply connected, and admits a holomorphic logarithm, given by:

reiθlogr+iθ

where θ(π,π) is the principal argument.

The slit plane also admits a holomorphic squareroot and holomorphic nth roots for higher n.

More generally, the term slit plane is used for a generalized slit plane: the complement in C of any (not necessarily straight) ray (with endpoint) going off to infinity. Any such slit plane is contractible, though not necessarily star-like, and admits holomorphic logarithms and roots. More generally, any simply connected domain that is not the whole of C is contained in a generalized slit plane.

Riemann mapping

The slit plane admits an easy Riemann mapping -- in fact, it is a very special case of the Riemann mapping theorem. First, choose a holomorphic squareroot on the slit plane, with the property that the squraeroot of a positive real number is is positive squareroot. The image of the slit plane under this mapping is the right half-plane.

Then the Riemann mapping is given by:

zz1z+1