Victor L. Shapiro: The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 109, No. 1. (Jan., 2002), Pp. 37-45
Victor L. Shapiro: The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 109, No. 1. (Jan., 2002), Pp. 37-45
Victor L. Shapiro
The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 109, No. 1. (Jan., 2002), pp. 37-45.
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Mon Mar 10 19:24:55 2008
+ u,,,.
whenever z ( x o ,yo; r ) is contained in S2. Here D(xo,yo; r ) is the open disk centered at
(xo,yo) with radius r . The expression on the right-hand side of ( 1 )is called the integral
mean-value of u at ( x o ,yo). The converse of the above result is also true; namely, if
u is a function from C0(S2)and ( 1 ) holds whenever B ( x o ,yo; r ) lies in 52, then u is
harmonic in S2. The two results together are referred to in the literature as the Gauss
mean-value theorem for harmonic functions.
Riemann, whose Ph.D. thesis was read and approved by Gauss, is well known for
the Cauchy-Riemann equations. These state that, if f ( z ) = u ( x , y ) i v ( x , y ) is analytic in '2, then
throughout S2. From these equations and the knowledge that the analytic function f is
in the class CCO(Q),
it follows that
37
a"to signify
forOir<land-m<8<m.
The problem that we are going to discuss starts out with the work of an important
French contemporary of Gauss, SimCon Poisson (1781-1840), and the famous kernel
function P(z) (or in polar coordinate form, P(r, 8)) that bears Poisson's name. It is
defined for z in as follows:
and that
where z = r cos 6 i r sin 8 . Because P(r, 8) is the real part of an analytic function, it
represents a harmonic function in the unit disk. Furthermore, using a familiar identity
for 1 - cos 8, we see that the Poisson kernel can be rewritten as
for 0 < 8 < 2n. This is clearly not the case for 8 = 0, where the corresponding limit
is m .
Next, we recall that in polar coordinates
+ 4r sin2(6/2)12'
for every 6.
38
,
Po(r, 6) = -
n=1
nrn sin nB
n=1
Let (1 w(r, .)(I, designate the uniform norm on concentric circles of radius r , i.e.,
+1,
(For "0"and "o" notation, see Zygmund [4, p. 141.) Using the well-known inequality
sin6 2 28/n for 0 < 6 < n/2, we also observe that
lim inf (1 - r12 I PB(r, 1 - r ) ( 2 4/n.
r+l
Hence, as r + 1, / ( Po(r, .) ( I , # o((1 - r)-2). Furthermore, recognizing the prototypical role that P (r, 8) plays in the theory of harmonic functions and noting as well that
0((1 - r)-') behaviour on the part of a quantity as r + 1 implies that this quantity is
o((1 - r)-2), one might be led by the foregoing discussion to conjecture the following
theorem concerning harmonic functions in the unit disk:
and
(ii) (1 w(r, .) 1 ,
= o ((1 - r)-2)
as r + 1.
2. PROOF OF THE THEOREM. The question is: How does one establish a result
of the above type? The conventional way of dealing with uniqueness properties of
January 20021
39
harmonic functions via the maximum principle does not appear to be applicable here.
What plays to our advantage, however, is that in a the function w is the real part of an
analytic function. Hence,
a.Writing c,
= a, -
x
CO
~ ( r8). = no
(5)
in which the series converges uniformly in (r, 8) for 0 5 r 5 ro < 1, where ro is any
fixed radius in (0, 1). What we also have at our disposal is the information that
r+l
a0
x
CO
(a, cos n8
,,=I
for all 8. Now, Cantor was led to the theory of sets [I, p. 9701 when he proved that
k
(a, cos n8
+ b, sin n0)
for all but a finite number of 8 with 0 5 8 < 2n implies that the coefficients a, and
b, are zero for all n. If we can show that condition (6) implies a similar conclusion
for the coefficients in the representation of w (r, 8) in (5), we will have established our
theorem. In other words, what we have to do is to improve on Cantor's techniques
(which were, in fact, inspired by Riemann's earlier work on trigonometric series).
For simplicity, we shall assume that w evaluated at the origin is zero, i.e.,
for all 8, which is also a property enjoyed by Pg(r, 8). Using (5), we evaluate w(0, 0)
and see that
Therefore, a. = 0 and
00
(a,, cos n8
w(r, 8) =
n=1
Next, we observe that for 0 < r < 1,
rl'a, = n-'
Talung r = 1 - n-', we can appeal to assumption (ii) in the theorem to assert that
( 1 - n-')"an = o(n2).Consequently, we learn (with a similar argument for b,) that
a,, = o (n2),
b, = o ( n 2 )
asn-oo.
We next set
(a,,cos n8
wl(r, 8 ) =
n=l
and
W ( r .Q ) =
n=1
(8)
From (8) and hypothesis (i) of the theorem, we infer that both wl (r, 8 ) and W (r, 8 )
satisfy the Cauchy criterion as r -+ 1 for fixed 8. In particular, the finite limit
lim W (r, 8 ) = W ( Q )
,+ 1
exists for all 8. Plainly W ( Q )is a periodic function of period 2 n . (The function
-W(r, 8 ) is called the Riemann function associated with w(r, 8).) We shall establish
our set-theoretic proof assuming the following three facts from the Riemannian theory
of trigonometric series (see Zygmund [4, ch. 1l ] and Kline [I, p. 9681). We shall make
further comments on these facts in the appendix of this paper.
Fact 1. If W ( 8 ) is continuous in the open interval ( a , p), then W ( 8 )is a linear fz~nction in ( a , p).
Fact 2. If W ( Q )is continuous in the open interval ( a ,B), then W ( Q )is continuous
from the right at a and from the left at P.
Fact 3. I f W ( 6 ) is identically a constant, then lim,,
W (r, 8 ) = W ( 0 ) uniformly in 6.
Together, Facts 1 and 2 imply that W ( 8 ) is a linear function in the closed interval
[ a ,PI.
Proceeding with the proof of the theorem, we observe from ( 8 ) that the following
situation prevails:
Fact 4. If w(r, 6 ) is uniformly bounded for 6 in a set E and for 112 5 r < 1, then
lim,,l W ( r ,6 ) = W ( 8 ) uniformly on E.
Indeed, it is clear from ( 8 ) that both w l ( r ,8 ) and W ( r ,6 ) satisfy uniform Lipschitz
conditions in the asserted range of r and 6 . Therefore, the limit is uniform, as stated.
We see that the proof of the theorem will be complete if we can verify that
January 20021
(10)
41
By Fact 2, W(0) is then continuous from the right at 0 and from the left at 2n; by
periodicity, it is continuous on the whole real line. Fact 1 thus ensures that W (Q) c ,
a constant, for all 6 in R. However, by the definition of W(r, 0) and Fact 3,
Therefore W (6)
0. Consequently,
a,r'"in2 = n-'
as r + 1, so the coefficient a,, = 0 for all n . Similarly, b , = 0 for all n , and the
theorem is established, modulo the verification of (10).
To show that statement (10) is true, we need the point-set topology and second
category theory alluded to earlier in this article. In particular, for m = 1 , 2 , . . . we set
F, = {Q E [O. 2n] : g(0) 5 m ) ,
(11)
where
for every closed subset E of [O,2n].An application of Baire's theorem then leads to
(12)
r-t 1
when E is a closed
(13)
We propose to show that Z is the empty set, which will establish (10) and complete
the proof of the theorem.
Suppose, to the contrary, that Z is not the empty set. We first exploit Fact 2 to assert
that Z has no isolated points. From Fact 5 and (12) applied to E = [a, B ] for arbitrary
a and /3 with 0 < a < /3 < 2n, it then follows that Z is nowhere dense in [O. 2x1.
Consequently, Z is a nonempty perfect set that contains no interval. Applying Fact 5
42
and (12) once again, this time with E = 7,we see that there is a closed interval [a, P ]
and a 80 in Z with 0 < a < 80 < p < 2 n such that
the restriction of W to [a, ,5]
n 2 is continuous at do.
(14)
(15)
By (13), this gives a contradiction to the fact that Q0 belongs to Z. Hence Z is empty,
and the theorem is proved.
The final missing piece of the proof is to show that, given statement (14) concerning
the nowhere dense, perfect subset Z of [O,2n], (15) follows. We prove that
W(8) is continuous from the right at Qo.
(16)
(Similar reasoning works for continuity from the left.) If 80 is the left-hand endpoint
of an open interval in (a, p ) \ z , then Fact 2 implies that W(8) is continuous from the
right at Qo. So what remains is to argue that (16) continues to hold when 80 is merely a
right-hand accumulation point of 7.We now do this.
Let E > 0. By (14), we can pick 6 > 0 so that
whenever 8 lies in 7 and Qo < Q < Q0 6. Next, choose 81 in 2 with 80 < 81 < 80 6.
Set 81 - Q0 = i . Now suppose Q* is a given point of (a, p ) \ T such that 80 < 8* <
80 i.Then Q* lies in some component interval of (a, p)\T, say (02, Q3),where 80 <
O2 < Q3 ( 61 and both 82 and Q3 are in 7 . Furthermore, by Facts 1 and 2, W is a linear
function in the closed interval [d2,03]. Since the inequality (17) holds for 8 = Q2 and
8 = 63, linearity dictates that it hold for 8 = 8* as well. What we have shown is that
3. APPENDIX. We proved the theorem under the assumption that w(r, 8) given
by (5) satisfies w(0,Q) = 0 for all 8 . To prove it without this assumption, consider
the function
h (r, Q) = w (r, 8) - w (r2, 28) ,
which is harmonic in the unit disk, satisfies hypotheses (i) and (ii) of the theorem, and
has h (0,Q) = 0 for all 8 . To see that this is true, we observe from (5) that
January 20021
for all 8. By what we have shown, h (r, 8 ) 0. Using ( 5 ) again, an easy computation
based on the vanishing of h demonstrates that
b,, =
where b, are the coefficients occurring in (5) for w(r, 8 ) . Because (k 1 ) / 2 5 k for
k >_ 1, we conclude from a simple induction on n that b, = 0 for all n >_ 1. A similar
fact holds for a,,. We thus deduce from (5) that w(r, 8 ) 5 ao. Assumption (i) of the
theorem then implies that w (r, 6 ) r 0 and completes the proof.
Fact 1 follows from Rajchman's lemma [4,p. 3531, which shows that
for all 8 in ( a , p ) , where 02and @ signify the upper and lower symmetric second
derivatives, respectively. The first condition implies that - W is convex in ( a , p ) , the
second that - W is concave in ( a , p). Hence, W is a linear function in ( a , p).
Fact 2 follows from a notion of smoothness found in Zygmund [4, p. 43 and p. 2631,
G(8)=
n=l
The smoothness assertion in question is that, if G has a derivative from the right at
some point, then it has a derivative from the left at that point and the two are equal.
To establish Fact 2, we also need Fatou's theorem found in Zygmund [4, pp. 991001, which tells us, in particular, that
for all 8 in R, where D' and 0' signify the upper and lower symmetric first derivatives,
respectively.
If W ( 6 ) = c16 c2 in the finite open interval ( a , p ) , then it follows from (18) that
G ( 6 ) = c 1 Q 2 / 2 c26 c3 in the closed interval [ a ,p]. Hence G ( 6 ) has a derivative
from the right at a equal to cla c2. But then by smoothness, it has a derivative
from the left at a equal to this same value. Consequently, G ( 8 ) has a derivative at a
equal to cla c2, and we infer from (18) that W ( a ) = cla c2. Therefore, W ( 8 )
is continuous from the right at a . A similar argument works from the left at ,8 and
completes the proof of Fact 2.
Fact 3 follows from the observation that both a,,/n2 and b,/n2 are o(1) as n + oo.
The Riemann function associated with these coeficients is
H(6) = -
n=l
44
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. The author would like to thank the referee for his helpful suggestions
REFERENCES
1. M. Kline, Mathernatical Tlzouglzt froin Ancient to Moderiz Times, Oxford University Press, New York,
1972.
2. W. F. Osgood, Note on the functions defined by infinite series whose terms are analytic functions of a
complex variable; with corresponding theorems for definite integrals, Anizals of Math. (2)3 (1901-02)
25-34.
3. V. L. Shapiro, The uniqueness of functions harmonic in the interior of the unit disk, Proc. London Math.
Soc. 13 (1963) 639-652.
4. A. Zygmund, Trigonoinetric Series, vol. 1, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1959.
VICTOR SHAPIRO served, during World War 11, as a frontline combat inedic with the 132nd Infantry Regiment in the South Pacific (Bougainville, Leyte, Cebu). Currently a nonlinear analyst, he wrote his Ph.D. thesis
at the University of Chicago on multiple trigonometric series with A. Zygmund. Shapiro's research work is
surveyed in Contemporaiy Mathematics, volume 208, a book in his honor. He walks 5 miles (almost) every
day and enjoys ballroom dancing with his wife Flo.
University of California, Riverside, Riverside CA 92521
shapiro @rlmth.ucr.erlu
OH CALCULUS, OH CALCULUS
(To: "Oh, Christmas Tree")
Oh, Calculus; Oh. Calculus,
How different seem thy branches.
Oh, Calculus; Oh, Calculus,
How different seem thy branches.
Derivatives tell us the rate,
For areas we integrate.
Oh, Calculus; Oh, Calculus,
How different seem thy branches.
Derivative, Derivative,
The limit your foundation.
Derivative, Derivative,
The limit your foundation.
A quotient, both parts growing nil,
Behold you reach a value still.
Derivative, Derivative,
The limit your foundation.
January 20021