- Cauchy's integral theorem
In
mathematics , the Cauchy integral theorem incomplex analysis , named afterAugustin Louis Cauchy , is an important statement aboutline integral s forholomorphic function s in the complex plane. Essentially, it says that if two different paths connect the same two points, and a function is holomorphic everywhere "in between" the two paths, then the two path integrals of the function will be the same.The theorem is usually formulated for closed paths as follows: let "U" be an
open subset of C which issimply connected , let "f" : "U" → C be a holomorphic function, and let γ be arectifiable path in "U" whose start point is equal to its end point. Then,:
As was shown by
Goursat , Cauchy's integral theorem can be proven assuming only that the complex derivative "f" '("z") exists everywhere in "U". This is significant, because one can then proveCauchy's integral formula for these functions, and from that one can deduce that these functions are in factinfinitely differentiable .The condition that "U" be
simply connected means that "U" has no "holes" or, inhomotopy terms, that thefundamental group of "U" is trivial; for instance, every open disk qualifies. The condition is crucial; consider:
which traces out the unit circle, and then the path integral
:
is non-zero; the Cauchy integral theorem does not apply here since "f"("z") = 1/"z" is not defined (and certainly not holomorphic) at "z" = 0.
One important consequence of the theorem is that path integrals of holomorphic functions on simply connected domains can be computed in a manner familiar from the fundamental theorem of real calculus: let "U" be a
simply connected open subset of C, let "f" : "U" → C be a holomorphic function, and let γ be apiecewise continuously differentiable path in "U" with start point "a" and end point "b". If "F" is acomplex antiderivative of "f", then:
The Cauchy integral theorem is valid in a slightly stronger form than given above. Suppose "U" is an open simply connected subset of C whose boundary is the image of the rectifiable path γ. If "f" is a function which is holomorphic on "U" and continuous on the closure of "U", then
:
The Cauchy integral theorem leads to
Cauchy's integral formula and theresidue theorem .ee also
*
Cauchy-Riemann equations
*Cauchy's integral formula
*Morera's theorem
*Methods of contour integration
*Residue (complex analysis) External links
*
* [http://math.fullerton.edu/mathews/c2003/CauchyGoursatMod.html Cauchy-Goursat Theorem Module by John H. Mathews]
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