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Osgood's lemma
Proposition in complex analysis From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In mathematics, Osgood's lemma, introduced by William Fogg Osgood (1899), is a proposition in complex analysis. It states that a continuous function of several complex variables that is holomorphic in each variable separately is holomorphic. The assumption that the function is continuous can be dropped, but that form of the lemma is much harder to prove and is known as Hartogs' theorem.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2025) |
There is no analogue of this result for real variables. If it is assumed that a function is globally continuous and separately differentiable on each variable (all partial derivatives exist everywhere), it is not true that will necessarily be differentiable. A counterexample in two dimensions is given by
If in addition it is defined that , this function is everywhere continuous and has well-defined partial derivatives in and everywhere (also at the origin), but is not differentiable at the origin.
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References
- Osgood, William F. (1899), "Note über analytische Functionen mehrerer Veränderlichen", Mathematische Annalen, 52 (2–3), Springer Berlin / Heidelberg: 462–464, doi:10.1007/BF01476172, ISSN 0025-5831
- Gunning, Robert Clifford; Rossi, Hugo (2009). Analytic Functions of Several Complex Variables. ISBN 978-0-8218-2165-7.
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