Goluzin's Inequalities
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In complex analysis and
geometric function theory Geometric function theory is the study of geometric properties of analytic functions. A fundamental result in the theory is the Riemann mapping theorem. Topics in geometric function theory The following are some of the most important topics in ge ...
, the Grunsky matrices, or Grunsky operators, are infinite matrices introduced in 1939 by
Helmut Grunsky Helmut Grunsky (11 July 1904 – 5 June 1986) was a German mathematician who worked in complex analysis and geometric function theory. He introduced Grunsky's theorem and the Grunsky inequalities. In 1936, he was appointed editor of ''Jahrbuch ...
. The matrices correspond to either a single holomorphic function on the unit disk or a pair of holomorphic functions on the unit disk and its complement. The Grunsky inequalities express boundedness properties of these matrices, which in general are contraction operators or in important special cases
unitary operator In functional analysis, a unitary operator is a surjective bounded operator on a Hilbert space that preserves the inner product. Unitary operators are usually taken as operating ''on'' a Hilbert space, but the same notion serves to define the co ...
s. As Grunsky showed, these inequalities hold if and only if the holomorphic function is univalent. The inequalities are equivalent to the inequalities of Goluzin, discovered in 1947. Roughly speaking, the Grunsky inequalities give information on the coefficients of the logarithm of a univalent function; later generalizations by Milin, starting from the Lebedev–Milin inequality, succeeded in exponentiating the inequalities to obtain inequalities for the coefficients of the univalent function itself. The Grunsky matrix and its associated inequalities were originally formulated in a more general setting of univalent functions between a region bounded by finitely many sufficiently smooth
Jordan curve In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is an object similar to a line, but that does not have to be straight. Intuitively, a curve may be thought of as the trace left by a moving point. This is the definition that a ...
s and its complement: the results of Grunsky, Goluzin and Milin generalize to that case. Historically the inequalities for the disk were used in proving special cases of the
Bieberbach conjecture In complex analysis, de Branges's theorem, or the Bieberbach conjecture, is a theorem that gives a necessary condition on a holomorphic function in order for it to map the open unit disk of the complex plane injectively to the complex plane. It ...
up to the sixth coefficient; the exponentiated inequalities of Milin were used by de Branges in the final solution. A detailed exposition using these methods can be found in . The Grunsky operators and their
Fredholm determinant In mathematics, the Fredholm determinant is a complex-valued function which generalizes the determinant of a finite dimensional linear operator. It is defined for bounded operators on a Hilbert space which differ from the identity operator by a tra ...
s are also related to spectral properties of bounded domains in the complex plane. The operators have further applications in
conformal mapping In mathematics, a conformal map is a function that locally preserves angles, but not necessarily lengths. More formally, let U and V be open subsets of \mathbb^n. A function f:U\to V is called conformal (or angle-preserving) at a point u_0\in ...
, Teichmüller theory and
conformal field theory A conformal field theory (CFT) is a quantum field theory that is invariant under conformal transformations. In two dimensions, there is an infinite-dimensional algebra of local conformal transformations, and conformal field theories can sometime ...
.


Grunsky Matrix

If ''f''(''z'') is a holomorphic univalent function on the unit disk, normalized so that ''f''(0) = 0 and ''f′''(0) = 1, the function : g(z) = f(z^)^ is a non-vanishing univalent function on , ''z'', > 1 having a simple pole at ∞ with residue 1: : g(z) = z + b_0 + b_1z^ + b_2 z^ + \cdots The same inversion formula applied to ''g'' gives back ''f'' and establishes a one-one correspondence between these two classes of function. The Grunsky matrix (''cnm'') of ''g'' is defined by the equation :\log\frac = -\sum_c_z^\zeta^ It is a
symmetric matrix In linear algebra, a symmetric matrix is a square matrix that is equal to its transpose. Formally, Because equal matrices have equal dimensions, only square matrices can be symmetric. The entries of a symmetric matrix are symmetric with ...
. Its entries are called the Grunsky coefficients of ''g''. Note that :\log = \log -\log -\log , so that the coefficients can be expressed directly in terms of ''f''. Indeed, if :\log = -\sum_ d_ z^n \zeta^n, then for ''m'', ''n'' > 0 :d_ = c_ and ''d''0''n'' = ''d''''n''0 is given by :\log \frac = \sum_ d_ z^n with :d_=0.


Grunsky inequalities

If ''f'' is a holomorphic function on the unit disk with Grunsky matrix (''c''''nm''), the Grunsky inequalities state that :\left, \sum_ c_\lambda_m \lambda_n \\le \sum_ \frac for any finite sequence of complex numbers λ1, ..., λ''N''.


Faber polynomials

The Grunsky coefficients of a normalized univalent function in , ''z'', > 1 :g(z)=z+b_0 + b_1z^ + b_2 z^ + \cdots are polynomials in the coefficients ''b''''i'' which can be computed recursively in terms of the Faber polynomials Φ''n'', a monic polynomial of degree ''n'' depending on ''g''. Taking the derivative in ''z'' of the defining relation of the Grunsky coefficients and multiplying by ''z'' gives :\frac - \frac = \sum_ m c_ z^ \zeta^. The Faber polynomials are defined by the relation :\frac=\sum_ \Phi_n(w) z^. Dividing this relation by ''z'' and integrating between ''z'' and ∞ gives :\log \frac =-\sum_\Phi_n(w) z^. This gives the recurrence relations for ''n'' > 0 :\Phi_n(w)= (w-b_0) \Phi_(w) -nb_n -\sum_ b_ \Phi_(w) with :\Phi_0(w)\equiv 1. Thus :\sum_ \Phi_n(g(z))\zeta^ =1+\sum_ \left(z^n +\sum_ c_z^\right)\zeta^, so that for ''n'' ≥ 1 :\Phi_n(g(z))=z^n + \sum_ c_z^. The latter property uniquely determines the Faber polynomial of ''g''.


Milin's area theorem

Let ''g''(''z'') be a univalent function on , ''z'', > 1 normalized so that : g(z) = z + b_1 z^ + b_2 z^ + \cdots and let ''f''(''z'') be a non-constant holomorphic function on C. If : f(g(z))=\sum_^\infty c_n z^n is the Laurent expansion on ''z'' > 1, then :\sum_ n, c_n, ^2 \le \sum_ n, c_, ^2.


Proof

If Ω is a bounded open region with smooth boundary ∂Ω and ''h'' is a differentiable function on Ω extending to a continuous function on the closure, then, by Stokes' theorem applied to the
differential 1-form In mathematics, differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications ...
\omega = h(z) dz, :\int_ h(z) \, dz = \int_ \omega = \iint_\Omega d\omega = \iint_\Omega (i\partial_x-\partial_y)h \, dx \, dy= 2i \iint_\Omega \partial_ h \,dx \, dy. For ''r'' > 1, let Ω''r'' be the complement of the image of , ''z'', > ''r'' under ''g''(''z''), a bounded domain. Then, by the above identity with ''h'' = ''f′'', the area of ''f''(Ω''r'') is given by :A(r)=\iint_ , f'(z), ^2\, dx \, dy = \int_ \overlinef'(z) \,dz=\int_ \overline f'(g(w)) g'(w)\, dw. Hence :A(r)=\pi \sum_n n, c_, ^2 r^. Since the area is non-negative : \sum_ n, c_n, ^2 r^ \le \sum_ n , c_, ^2 r^. The result follows by letting ''r'' decrease to 1.


Milin's proof of Grunsky inequalities

If : p(w)=\sum_^N n^ \lambda_n \Phi_n(w), then :p(g(z))=\left( \sum_^N n^\lambda_n z^n\right) +\left(\sum_^\infty \sum_^N \lambda_n c_z^\right). Applying Milin's area theorem, :\sum_^\infty m\left, \sum_^N c_\lambda_n\^2 \le \sum_^N , \lambda_n, ^2. (Equality holds here if and only if the complement of the image of ''g'' has Lebesgue measure zero.) So ''a fortiori'' :\sum_^N m\left, \sum_^N c_\lambda_n\^2 \le \sum_^N , \lambda_n, ^2. Hence the symmetric matrix :a_= \sqrt c_, regarded as an operator on C''N'' with its standard inner product, satisfies :\, Ax\, \le \, x\, . So by the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality :, (Ax,y), \le \, x\, \cdot\, y\, . With : x_n= \frac=\overline, this gives the Grunsky inequality: : \left , \sum_^N\sum_^N c_ \lambda_m\lambda_n\^2 \le \sum_^N , \lambda_n, ^2,


Criterion for univalence

Let ''g''(''z'') be a holomorphic function on ''z'' > 1 with : g(z) = z + b_0 + b_1 z^ + b_2 z^ + \cdots Then ''g'' is univalent if and only if the Grunsky coefficients of ''g'' satisfy the Grunsky inequalities for all ''N''. In fact the conditions have already been shown to be necessary. To see sufficiency, note that : \log =-\sum_ c_z^\zeta^ makes sense when , ''z'', and , ζ, are large and hence the coefficients ''cmn'' are defined. If the Grunsky inequalities are satisfied then it is easy to see that the , ''cmn'', are uniformly bounded and hence the expansion on the left hand side converges for , ''z'', > 1 and , ζ, > 1. Exponentiating both sides, this implies that ''g'' is univalent.


Pairs of univalent functions

Let F(z) and g(\zeta) be univalent holomorphic functions on , ''z'', < 1 and , ζ, > 1, such that their images are disjoint in C. Suppose that these functions are normalized so that :g(\zeta)=\zeta+a_0 + b_1\zeta^ + b_2\zeta^ + \cdots and :F(z)=af(z) with ''a'' ≠ 0 and :f(z) = z + a_2z^2 + a_3z^3 + \cdots. The Grunsky matrix (''cmn'') of this pair of functions is defined for all non-zero ''m'' and ''n'' by the formulas: :\begin \log &= -\sum_ c_ \zeta^ \eta^ \\ \log -\log &= -\sum_ c_ z^m\zeta^ \\ \log -\log -\log &= -\sum_ c_ z^m w^n \end with :c_ =c_, \qquad m,n \ge 1, so that (''cmn'') is a symmetric matrix. In 1972 the American mathematician James Hummel extended the Grunsky inequalities to this matrix, proving that for any sequence of complex numbers λ±1, ..., λ±''N'' : \left , \sum_ c_\lambda_m\lambda_n \right , \le \sum_ \frac , \lambda_n, ^2. The proof proceeds by computing the area of the image of the complement of the images of , ''z'', < ''r'' < 1 under ''F'' and , ζ, > ''R'' > 1 under ''g'' under a suitable Laurent polynomial ''h''(''w''). Let \phi_ and \phi_ denote the Faber polynomials of ''g'' and f(z^)^ and set :h(w) =\sum_ \frac \Phi_n(w) + \sum_ \frac \Phi_\left (\frac\right ). Then: : \begin h(F(z))&=\sum_ \fracz^+\alpha+\sum_ \alpha_n z^n, && , z, <1, \alpha_n=\sum_m c_\lambda_m \\ h(g(\zeta))&=\sum_ \frac \zeta^n+\beta +\sum_ \beta_n \zeta^, && , \zeta, > 1, \beta_n=\sum_m c_ \lambda_m \end The area equals :\int , h'(z), ^2 \, dx \, dy= \frac\int_ \overline(z) h'(z)\, dz -\frac\int_ \overline(z) h'(z)\, dz, where ''C''1 is the image of the circle , ζ, = ''R'' under ''g'' and ''C''2 is the image of the circle , ''z'', = ''r'' under ''F''. Hence :\frac\iint , h', ^2 \, dx \, dy = \left \lambda_, ^2 - \sum_ , \alpha_n, ^2 r^ \right +\left \lambda_n, ^2 - \sum_ , \beta_n, ^2 R^\right Since the area is positive, the right hand side must also be positive. Letting ''r'' increase to 1 and ''R'' decrease to ''1'', it follows that :\sum_ , m, \left, \sum_ c_\lambda_n\^2 \le \sum_ , \lambda_m, ^2 with equality if and only if the complement of the images has Lebesgue measure zero. As in the case of a single function ''g'', this implies the required inequality.


Unitarity

The matrix : a_=\sqrt \cdot c_ of a single function ''g'' or a pair of functions ''F'', ''g'' is unitary if and only if the complement of the image of ''g'' or the union of the images of ''F'' and ''g'' has Lebesgue measure zero. So, roughly speaking, in the case of one function the image is a slit region in the complex plane; and in the case of two functions the two regions are separated by a closed Jordan curve. In fact the infinite matrix ''A'' acting on the Hilbert space of square summable sequences satisfies :A^*A=I, But if ''J'' denotes complex conjugation of a sequence, then :JAJ=A^*, \quad JA^*J=A since ''A'' is symmetric. Hence :AA^*=JA^*AJ=I so that ''A'' is unitary.


Equivalent forms of Grunsky inequalities


Goluzin inequalities

If ''g''(''z'') is a normalized univalent function in , ''z'', > 1, ''z''1, ..., ''z''''N'' are distinct points with , ''zn'', > 1 and α1, ..., α''N'' are complex numbers, the Goluzin inequalities, proved in 1947 by the Russian mathematician Gennadi Mikhailovich Goluzin (1906-1953), state that : \left, \sum_^N \sum_^N \alpha_m\alpha_n \log\^2 \le \sum_^N\sum_^N \alpha_m \overline \log . To deduce them from the Grunsky inequalities, let :\lambda_k=\sum_^N \alpha_n z_n^. for ''k'' > 0. Conversely the Grunsky inequalities follow from the Goluzin inequalities by taking :\alpha_m= \sum_^N\lambda_n z_n^m. where :z_n=re^ with ''r'' > 1, tending to ∞.


Bergman–Schiffer inequalities

gave another derivation of the Grunsky inequalities using
reproducing kernel In functional analysis (a branch of mathematics), a reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS) is a Hilbert space of functions in which point evaluation is a continuous linear functional. Roughly speaking, this means that if two functions f and g in ...
s and singular integral operators in
geometric function theory Geometric function theory is the study of geometric properties of analytic functions. A fundamental result in the theory is the Riemann mapping theorem. Topics in geometric function theory The following are some of the most important topics in ge ...
; a more recent related approach can be found in . Let ''f''(''z'') be a normalized univalent function in , ''z'', < 1, let ''z''1, ..., ''z''''N'' be distinct points with , ''z''''n'', < 1 and let α1, ..., α''N'' be complex numbers. The Bergman-Schiffer inequalities state that :\left, \sum_^N \sum_^N \alpha_m \alpha_n\left \frac - \frac\right\ \le \sum_^N \sum_^N \alpha_m \overline \frac. To deduce these inequalities from the Grunsky inequalities, set :\lambda_k=k\sum_^N \alpha_n z_n^k. for ''k'' > 0. Conversely the Grunsky inequalities follow from the Bergman-Schiffer inequalities by taking :\alpha_m= \frac \sum_^N \frac \lambda_n z_n^m. where :z_n=re^ with ''r'' < 1, tending to 0.


Applications

The Grunsky inequalities imply many inequalities for univalent functions. They were also used by Schiffer and Charzynski in 1960 to give a completely elementary proof of the
Bieberbach conjecture In complex analysis, de Branges's theorem, or the Bieberbach conjecture, is a theorem that gives a necessary condition on a holomorphic function in order for it to map the open unit disk of the complex plane injectively to the complex plane. It ...
for the fourth coefficient; a far more complicated proof had previously been found by Schiffer and Garabedian in 1955. In 1968 Pedersen and Ozawa independently used the Grunsky inequalities to prove the conjecture for the sixth coefficient. In the proof of Schiffer and Charzynski, if :f(x)=z+a_2 z^2 + a_3 z^3 + a_4z^4 + \cdots is a normalized univalent function in , ''z'', < 1, then :g(z) =f(z^2)^=z + b_1 z^ + b_3 z^ + \cdots is an odd univalent function in , ''z'', > 1. Combining
Gronwall's area theorem In complex analysis, a branch of mathematics, the Koebe 1/4 theorem states the following: Koebe Quarter Theorem. The image of an injective analytic function f:\mathbf\to\mathbb from the unit disk \mathbf onto a subset of the complex plane con ...
for ''f'' with the Grunsky inequalities for the first 2 x 2 minor of the Grunsky matrix of ''g'' leads to a bound for , ''a''4, in terms of a simple function of ''a''2 and a free complex parameter. The free parameter can be chosen so that the bound becomes a function of half the modulus of ''a''2 and it can then be checked directly that this function is no greater than 4 on the range ,1 As Milin showed, the Grunsky inequalities can be exponentiated. The simplest case proceeds by writing : \log = - \sum_ a_n(\zeta^)z^. with ''a''''n''(''w'') holomorphic in , ''w'', < 1. The Grunsky inequalities, with λ''n'' = ''w''''n'' imply that :\sum_ n, a_n(w), ^2 \le - \log (1-, w, ^2). On the other hand, if :\sum_ b_m t^m = \exp \sum_ a_n t^n as formal power series, then the first of the Lebedev–Milin inequalities (1965) states that :\sum_ , b_n, ^2 \le \exp \sum_ n , a_n, ^2. Equivalently the inequality states that if ''g''(''z'') is a polynomial with ''g''(0) = 0, then : \int_0^ , e^g, ^2 \, d\theta \le e^A, where ''A'' is the area of ''g''(''D''), To prove the inequality, note that the coefficients are determined by the recursive formula :b_n=\sum_^n ma_m b_ so that by the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality :, b_n, ^2 \le \sum m^2 , a_m, ^2 , b_, ^2. The quantities ''c''''n'' obtained by imposing equality here: :c_n= \sum m^2 , a_m, ^2 c_ satisfy , b_n, ^2 \le c_n and hence, reversing the steps, :\sum , b_n, ^2 \le \sum c_n = \exp \sum_ m, a_m, ^2. In particular defining ''b''''n''(''w'') by the identity :\sum b_n(\zeta^) z^ = \exp \sum a_m(\zeta^) z^ = , the following inequality must hold for , ''w'', < 1 :\sum_ , b_n(w), ^2 \le (1-, w, ^2)^.


Beurling transform

The Beurling transform (also called the Beurling-Ahlfors transform and the Hilbert transform in the complex plane) provides one of the most direct methods of proving the Grunsky inequalities, following and . The Beurling transform is defined on ''L''2(C) as the operation of multiplication by z/\overline on Fourier transforms. It thus defines a unitary operator. It can also be defined directly as a
principal value integral In mathematics, the Cauchy principal value, named after Augustin Louis Cauchy, is a method for assigning values to certain improper integrals which would otherwise be undefined. Formulation Depending on the type of singularity in the integrand ...
: (Th)(w)=\lim_ -\iint_ \,dx \, dy. For any bounded open region Ω in C it defines a bounded operator ''T''Ω from the conjugate of the Bergman space of Ω onto the Bergman space of Ω: a square integrable holomorphic function is extended to 0 off Ω to produce a function in ''L''2(C) to which ''T'' is applied and the result restricted to Ω, where it is holomorphic. If ''f'' is a holomorphic univalent map from the unit disk ''D'' onto Ω then the Bergman space of Ω and its conjugate can be identified with that of ''D'' and ''T''Ω becomes the singular integral operator with kernel :K_f(z,w)= \frac. It defines a
contraction Contraction may refer to: Linguistics * Contraction (grammar), a shortened word * Poetic contraction, omission of letters for poetic reasons * Elision, omission of sounds ** Syncope (phonology), omission of sounds in a word * Synalepha, merged ...
. On the other hand, it can be checked that ''T''''D'' = 0 by computing directly on powers \overline^n using Stokes theorem to transfer the integral to the boundary. It follows that the operator with kernel : - = \log =-\sum_ mnc_ z^w^ acts as a contraction on the conjugate of the Bergman space of ''D''. Hence, if : p(z)=\lambda_1 + \lambda_2 \overline + \lambda_3 \overline^2 + \cdots + \lambda_N \overline^, then : \sum_^N \left, \sum_^N c_\lambda_n\^2=\, (T_f-T_z)p\, ^2 =\, T_fp\, ^2\le \, p\, ^2= \sum_^N , \lambda_n, ^2.


Grunsky operator and Fredholm determinant

If Ω is a bounded domain in C with smooth boundary, the operator ''T''Ω can be regarded as a bounded antilinear contractive operator on the Bergman space ''H'' = ''A''2(Ω). It is given by the formula : (T_\Omega u)(z) = \lim_ \iint_ \,\, dx \, dy for ''u'' in the Hilbert space ''H''= ''A''2(Ω). ''T''Ω is called the Grunsky operator of Ω (or ''f''). Its realization on ''D'' using a univalent function ''f'' mapping ''D'' onto Ω and the fact that ''TD'' = 0 shows that it is given by restriction of the kernel :\frac - \frac, and is therefore a
Hilbert–Schmidt operator In mathematics, a Hilbert–Schmidt operator, named after David Hilbert and Erhard Schmidt, is a bounded operator A \colon H \to H that acts on a Hilbert space H and has finite Hilbert–Schmidt norm \, A\, ^2_ \ \stackrel\ \sum_ \, Ae_i\, ...
. The antilinear operator ''T'' = ''T''Ω satisfies the self-adjointness relation :(Tu,v)=(Tv,u) for ''u'', ''v'' in ''H''. Thus ''A'' = ''T''2 is a compact self-adjont linear operator on ''H'' with :(Au,u)=(Tu,Tu)=\, Tu\, ^2\ge 0, so that ''A'' is a positive operator. By the spectral theorem for compact self-adjoint operators, there is an orthonormal basis ''u''''n'' of ''H'' consisting of eigenvectors of ''A'': :Au_n=\mu_n u_n, where μ''n'' is non-negative by the positivity of ''A''. Hence :\mu_n=\lambda_n^2 with λ''n'' ≥ 0. Since ''T'' commutes with ''A'', it leaves its eigenspaces invariant. The positivity relation shows that it acts trivially on the zero eigenspace. The other non-zero eigenspaces are all finite-dimensional and mutually orthogonal. Thus an orthonormal basis can be chosen on each eigenspace so that: :Tu_n=\lambda_n u_n. (Note that T(iu_n)=-\lambda_n iu_n by antilinearity of ''T''.) The non-zero λ''n'' (or sometimes their reciprocals) are called the Fredholm eigenvalues of Ω: :0\le \lambda_n \le \, T\, \le 1. If Ω is a bounded domain that is not a disk, Ahlfors showed that :\, T_\Omega\, < 1. The
Fredholm determinant In mathematics, the Fredholm determinant is a complex-valued function which generalizes the determinant of a finite dimensional linear operator. It is defined for bounded operators on a Hilbert space which differ from the identity operator by a tra ...
for the domain Ω is defined by :\Delta_\Omega=\det (I- T_\Omega^2) =\prod (1-\lambda_n^2). Note that this makes sense because ''A'' = ''T''2 is a
trace class operator In mathematics, specifically functional analysis, a trace-class operator is a linear operator for which a trace may be defined, such that the trace is a finite number independent of the choice of basis used to compute the trace. This trace of trace ...
. showed that if 0\in\Omega and ''f'' fixes 0, then :\Delta_\Omega= -\frac \left \partial_z \log f' \, ^2_D +\, \partial_z \log g'\, ^2_ - 2 \left \, \partial_z\log \frac \right \, ^2_D - 2 \left \, \partial_z\log \frac \right \, ^2_\right Here the norms are in the Bergman spaces of ''D'' and its complement ''D''''c'' and ''g'' is a univalent map from ''D''''c'' onto Ω''c'' fixing ∞. A similar formula applies in the case of a pair of univalent functions (see below).


Singular integral operators on a closed curve

Let Ω be a bounded simply connected domain in C with smooth boundary ''C'' = ∂Ω. Thus there is a univalent holomorphic map ''f'' from the unit disk ''D'' onto Ω extending to a smooth map between the boundaries ''S''1 and ''C''.


Notes


References

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *{{citation, last=Widom, first= H., title=On an inequality of Osgood, Phillips and Sarnak, journal=Proc. Amer. Math. Soc., volume= 102 , issue= 3, year=1988, pages=773–774, doi=10.1090/s0002-9939-1988-0929019-3, doi-access=free Complex analysis Moduli theory Operator theory