LOGARITHMIC DERIVATIVE OF THE BLASCHKE PRODUCT WITH SLOWLY INCREASING COUNTING FUNCTION OF ZEROS

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-170
Author(s):  
Y. Gal ◽  
M. Zabolotskyi ◽  
M. Mostova

The Blaschke products form an important subclass of analytic functions on the unit disc with bounded Nevanlinna characteristic and also are meromorphic functions on $\mathbb{C}$ except for the accumulation points of zeros $B(z)$. Asymptotics and estimates of the logarithmic derivative of meromorphic functions play an important role in various fields of mathematics. In particular, such problems in Nevanlinna's theory of value distribution were studied by Goldberg A.A., Korenkov N.E., Hayman W.K., Miles J. and in the analytic theory of differential equations -- by Chyzhykov I.E., Strelitz Sh.I. Let $z_0=1$ be the only boundary point of zeros $(a_n)$ %=1-r_ne^{i\psi_n},$ $-\pi/2+\eta<\psi_n<\pi/2-\eta,$ $r_n\to0+$ as $n\to+\infty,$ of the Blaschke product $B(z);$ $\Gamma_m=\bigcup\limits_{j=1}^{m}\{z:|z|<1,\mathop{\text{arg}}(1-z)=-\theta_j\}=\bigcup\limits_{j=1}^{m}l_{\theta_j},$ $-\pi/2+\eta<\theta_1<\theta_2<\ldots<\theta_m<\pi/2-\eta,$ be a finite system of rays, $0<\eta<1$; $\upsilon(t)$ be continuous on $[0,1)$, $\upsilon(0)=0$, slowly increasing at the point 1 function, that is $\upsilon(t)\sim\upsilon\left({(1+t)}/2\right),$ $t\to1-;$ $n(t,\theta_j;B)$ be a number of zeros $a_n=1-r_ne^{i\theta_j}$ of the product $B(z)$ on the ray $l_{\theta_j}$ such that $1-r_n\leq t,$ $0<t<1.$ We found asymptotics of the logarithmic derivative of $B(z)$ as $z=1-re^{-i\varphi}\to1,$ $-\pi/2<\varphi<\pi/2,$ $\varphi\neq\theta_j,$ under the condition that zeros of $B(z)$ lay on $\Gamma_m$ and $n(t,\theta_j;B)\sim \Delta_j\upsilon(t),$ $t\to1-,$ for all $j=\overline{1,m},$ $0\leq\Delta_j<+\infty.$ We also considered the inverse problem for such $B(z).$

1996 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 347-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter Rudin

The classical statement of the lemma in question [7], [3] is about meromorphic functions f on ℂ and says thatfor all r > 0, with the possible exception of a set of finite Lebesgue measure. Here T(r, f) is the Nevanlinna characteristic of f. The lemma plays an important role in value distribution theory.


2021 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-54
Author(s):  
Ya.I. Savchuk ◽  
A.I. Bandura

We introduce a concept of asymptotic vector of an entire curve with linearly independent components and without common zeros and investigate a relationship between the asymptotic vectors and the Picard exceptional vectors. A non-zero vector $\vec{a}=(a_1,a_2,\ldots,a_p)\in \mathbb{C}^{p}$ is called an asymptotic vector for the entire curve $\vec{G}(z)=(g_1(z),g_2(z),\ldots,g_p(z))$ if there exists a continuous curve $L: \mathbb{R}_+\to \mathbb{C}$ given by an equation $z=z\left(t\right)$, $0\le t<\infty $, $\left|z\left(t\right)\right|<\infty $, $z\left(t\right)\to \infty $ as $t\to \infty $ such that$$\lim\limits_{\stackrel{z\to\infty}{z\in L}} \frac{\vec{G}(z)\vec{a} }{\big\|\vec{G}(z)\big\|}=\lim\limits_{t\to\infty} \frac{\vec{G}(z(t))\vec{a} }{\big\|\vec{G}(z(t))\big\|} =0,$$ where $\big\|\vec{G}(z)\big\|=\big(|g_1(z)|^2+\ldots +|g_p(z)|^2\big)^{1/2}$, $\vec{G}(z)\vec{a}=g_1(z)\cdot\bar{a}_1+g_2(z)\cdot\bar{a}_2+\ldots+g_p(z)\cdot\bar{a}_p$. A non-zero vector $\vec{a}=(a_1,a_2,\ldots,a_p)\in \mathbb{C}^{p}$ is called a Picard exceptional vector of an entire curve $\vec{G}(z)$ if the function $\vec{G}(z)\vec{a}$ has a finite number of zeros in $\left\{\left|z\right|<\infty \right\}$. We prove that any Picard exceptional vector of transcendental entire curve with linearly independent com\-po\-nents and without common zeros is an asymptotic vector.Here we de\-mon\-stra\-te that the exceptional vectors in the sense of Borel or Nevanlina and, moreover, in the sense of Valiron do not have to be asymptotic. For this goal we use an example of meromorphic function of finite positive order, for which $\infty $ is no asymptotic value, but it is the Nevanlinna exceptional value. This function is constructed in known Goldberg and Ostrovskii's monograph``Value Distribution of Meromorphic Functions''.Other our result describes sufficient conditions providing that some vectors are asymptotic for transcendental entire curve of finite order with linearly independent components and without common zeros. In this result, we require that the order of the Nevanlinna counting function for this curve and for each such a vector is less than order of the curve.At the end of paper we formulate three unsolved problems concerning asymptotic vectors of entire curve.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 334-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. T. Cargo

In this paper, we shall be concerned with bounded, holomorphic functions of the formwhere(1)(2)and(3)B(z{an}) is called a Blaschke product, and any sequence {an} which satisfies (2) and (3) is called a Blaschke sequence. For a general discussion of the properties of Blaschke products, see (18, pp. 271-285) or (14, pp. 49-52).According to a theorem due to Riesz (15), a Blaschke product has radial limits of modulus one almost everywhere on C = {z: |z| = 1}. Moreover, it is common knowledge that, if a Blaschke product has a radial limit at a point, then it also has an angular limit at the point (see 14, p. 19 and 6, p. 457).


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 172-187
Author(s):  
I.E. Chyzhykov ◽  
A.Z. Mokhon'ko

We established new sharp estimates outside exceptional sets for of the logarithmic derivatives $\frac{d^ {k} \log f(z)}{dz^k}$ and its generalization $\frac{f^{(k)}(z)}{f^{(j)}(z)}$, where $f$ is a meromorphic function $f$ in the upper half-plane, $k>j\ge0$ are integers. These estimates improve known estimates due to the second author in the class of meromorphic functions of finite order.Examples show that size of exceptional sets are best possible in some sense.


1971 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 257-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Fisher

The theorems in this paper are all concerned with either pointwise or uniform approximation by functions which have unit modulus or by convex combinations of such functions. The results are related to, and are outgrowths of, the theorems in [4; 5; 10].In § 1, we show that a function bounded by 1, which is analytic in the open unit disc Δ and continuous on may be approximated uniformly on the set where it has modulus 1 (subject to certain restrictions; see Theorem 1) by a finite Blaschke product; that is, by a function of the form*where |λ| = 1 and |αi| < 1, i = 1, …, N. In § 1 we also discuss pointwise approximation by Blaschke products with restricted zeros.


1983 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 617-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilhelm Stoll

Value distribution is developed on polydiscs with the special emphasis that the value distribution function depend on a vector variable. A Lemma of the logarithmic derivative for meromorphic functions on polydiscs is derived. Here the Bergman boundary of the polydiscs is approached along cones of any dimension and exceptional sets for such an approach are defined.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (3 (247)) ◽  
pp. 166-171
Author(s):  
G.V. Mikayelyan ◽  
F.V. Hayrapetyan

Using the Fourier transforms method for meromorphic functions we characterize the behavior of the integral logarithmic mean of arbitrary order of Blaschke products for the half-plane.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 176-186
Author(s):  
Elias Wegert ◽  
Ilya Spitkovsky

Abstract In their LAMA 2016 paper Gau, Wang and Wu conjectured that a partial isometry A acting on ℂ n cannot have a circular numerical range with a non-zero center, and proved this conjecture for n ≤ 4. We prove it for operators with rank A = n − 1 and any n. The proof is based on the unitary similarity of A to a compressed shift operator SB generated by a finite Blaschke product B. We then use the description of the numerical range of SB as intersection of Poncelet polygons, a special representation of Blaschke products related to boundary interpolation, and an explicit formula for the barycenter of the vertices of Poncelet polygons involving elliptic functions.


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