Differential 1-form associated with a complex-valued function

From Companal
Revision as of 23:36, 13 April 2008 by Vipul (talk | contribs) (New page: ==Definition== Let <math>U</math> be an open subset of <math>\mathbb{C}</math>, and <math>f:U \to \mathbb{C}</math> be a continuous function. The differential 1-form associated with <math...)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Definition

Let U be an open subset of C, and f:UC be a continuous function. The differential 1-form associated with f is the 1-form:

f(z)dz

Explicitly, if we separate f into real and imaginary parts:

f(z)=u(z)+iv(z)

then the differential form is given by:

u(z)dx+v(z)dy

Facts

Closed if and only if holomorphic

The differential 1-form f(z)dz is a closed form, i.e. its de Rham derivative is zero, if and only if f is a holomorphic function. This is seen from the fact that the real and imaginary parts in the formula for the exterior derivative, are zero by the Cauchy-Riemann differential equations

Exact if and only if a complex differential

f(z)dz is an exact form if and only if f is a complex differential.