Advanced Complex Analysis Part 2. Instructor: Dr. T.E. Venkata Balaji, Department of Mathematics, IIT Madras. This is the second part of a series of lectures on advanced topics in Complex Analysis. By advanced, we mean topics that are not (or just barely) touched upon in a first course on Complex Analysis. The theme of the course is to study compactness and convergence in families of analytic (or holomorphic) functions and in families of meromorphic functions. The compactness we are interested herein is the so-called sequential compactness, and more specifically it is normal convergence - namely convergence on compact subsets. The final objective is to prove the Great or Big Picard Theorem and deduce the Little or Small Picard Theorem.
(from nptel.ac.in)
Unit 1: Theorems of Picard, Casorati-Weierstrass and Riemann on Removable Singularities |
Lecture 01 - Properties of the Image of an Analytic Function: Introduction to the Picard Theorems |
Lecture 02 - Recalling Singularities of Analytic Functions: Non-isolated and Isolated Removable, Pole and Essential Singularities |
Lecture 03 - Recalling Riemann's Theorem on Removable Singularities |
Lecture 04 - Casorati-Weierstrass Theorem; Dealing with the Point at Infinity - Riemann Sphere and Riemann Stereographic Projection |
Unit 2: Neighborhoods of Infinity, Limits at Infinity and Infinite Limits |
Lecture 05 - Neighborhood of Infinity, Limit at Infinity and Infinity as an Isolated Singularity |
Lecture 06 - Studying Infinity: Formulating Epsilon-Delta Definitions for Infinite Limits and Limits at Infinity |
Unit 3: Infinity as a Point of Analyticity |
Lecture 07 - When is a Function Analytic at Infinity? |
Lecture 08 - Laurent Expansion at Infinity and Riemann's Removable Singularities Theorem for the Point at Infinity |
Lecture 09 - The Generalized Liouville Theorem: Little Brother of Little Picard and Analogue of Casorati-Weierstrass; Failure of Cauchy's Theorem at Infinity |
Lecture 10 - Morera's Theorem at Infinity, Infinity as a Pole and Behaviour at Infinity of Rational and Meromorphic Functions |
Unit 4: Residue at Infinity and Residue Theorem for the Extended Complex Plane |
Lecture 11 - Residue at Infinity and Introduction to the Residue Theorem for the Extended Complex Plane: Residue Theorem for the Point at Infinity |
Lecture 12 - Proofs of Two Avatars of the Residue Theorem for the Extended Complex Plane and Applications of the Residue at Infinity |
Unit 5: The Behavior of Transcendental and Meromorphic Functions at Infinity |
Lecture 13 - Infinity as an Essential Singularity and Transcendental Entire Functions |
Lecture 14 - Meromorphic Functions on the Extended Complex Plane are Precisely Quotients of Polynomials |
Lecture 15 - The Ubiquity of Meromorphic Functions: The Nerves of the Geometric Network Bridging Algebra, Analysis and Topology |
Lecture 16 - Continuity of Meromorphic Functions at Poles and Topologies of Spaces of Functions |
Unit 6: Normal Convergence in the Inversion-Invariant Spherical Metric on the Extended Plane |
Lecture 17 - Why Normal Convergence, but Not Globally Uniform Convergence, is the Inevitable in Complex Analysis |
Lecture 18 - Measuring Distances to Infinity, the Function Infinity and Normal Convergence of Holomorphic Functions in the Spherical Metric |
Lecture 19 - The Invariance under Inversion of the Spherical Metric on the Extended Complex Plane |
Unit 7: Hurwitz Theorems on Normal Limits of Holomorphic and Meromorphic Functions under the Spherical Metric |
Lecture 20 - Introduction to Hurwitz's Theorem for Normal Convergence of Holomorphic Functions in the Spherical Metric |
Lecture 21 - Completion of Proof of Hurwitz's Theorem for Normal Limits of Analytic Functions in the Spherical Metric |
Lecture 22 - Hurwitz's Theorem for Normal Limits of Meromorphic Functions in the Spherical Metric |
Unit 8: The Inversion-Invariant Spherical Derivative for Meromorphic Functions |
Lecture 23 - What could the Derivative of a Meromorphic Function Relative to the Spherical Metric Possibly Be? |
Lecture 24 - Defining the Spherical Derivative of a Meromorphic Function |
Lecture 25 - Well-definedness of the Spherical Derivative of a Meromorphic Function at a Pole and Inversion-invariance of the Spherical Derivative |
Unit 9: From Compactness to Boundedness via Equicontinuity |
Lecture 26 - Topological Preliminaries: Translating Compactness into Boundedness |
Lecture 27 - Introduction to the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem: Passing from Abstract Compactness to Verifiable Equicontinuity |
Lecture 28 - Proof of the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem for Functions: Abstract Compactness Implies Equicontinuity |
Lecture 29 - Proof of the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem for Functions: Equicontinuity Implies Compactness |
Unit 10: The Montel Theorem - The Holomorphic Avatar of the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem |
Lecture 30 - Introduction to the Montel Theorem - the Holomorphic Avatar of the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem and Why you get Equicontinuity for Free |
Lecture 31 - Completion of Proof of the Montel Theorem - the Holomorphic Avatar of the Arzela-Ascoli Theorem |
Unit 11: The Marty Theorem - The Meromorphic Avatar of the Montel and Arzela-Ascoli Theorems |
Lecture 32 - Introduction to Marty's Theorem - the Meromorphic Avatar of the Montel and Arzela-Ascoli Theorems |
Lecture 33 - Proof of One Direction of Marty's Theorem - the Meromorphic Avatar of the Montel and Arzela-Ascoli Theorems - Normal Uniform Boundedness of Spherical Derivatives Implies Normal Sequential Compactness |
Lecture 34 - Proof of the Other Direction of Marty's Theorem - the Meromorphic Avatar of the Montel and Arzela-Ascoli Theorems - Normal Sequential Compactness Implies Normal Uniform Boundedness of Spherical Derivatives |
Unit 12: The Hurwitz, Montel and Marty Theorems at Infinity |
Lecture 35 - Normal Convergence at Infinity and Hurwitz's Theorems for Normal Limits of Analytic and Meromorphic Functions at Infinity |
Lecture 36 - Normal Sequential Compactness, Normal Uniform Boundedness and Montel's and Marty's Theorems at Infinity |
Unit 13: Local Analysis of Normality by the Zooming Process and Zalcman's Lemma |
Lecture 37 - Local Analysis of Normality and the Zooming Process - Motivation for Zalcman's Lemma |
Lecture 38 - Characterizing Normality at a Point by the Zooming Process and the Motivation for Zalcman's Lemma |
Unit 14: Zalcman's Lemma, Montel's Normality Criterion and Theorems of Picard, Royden and Schottky |
Lecture 39 - Local Analysis of Normality and the Zooming Process - Motivation for Zalcman's Lemma |
Lecture 40 - Montel's Deep Theorem: The Fundamental Criterion for Normality or Fundamental Normality Test based on Omission of Values |
Lecture 41 - Proofs of the Great and Little Picard Theorems |
Lecture 42 - Royden's Theorem on Normality based on Growth of Derivatives |
Lecture 43 - Schottky's Theorem: Uniform Boundedness from a Point to a Neighbourhood and Problem Solving Session |