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Hadamard three-lines theorem

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In complex analysis, a branch of mathematics, the Hadamard three-line theorem is a result about the behaviour of holomorphic functions defined in regions bounded by parallel lines in the complex plane. The theorem is named after the French mathematician Jacques Hadamard.

Statement

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Hadamard three-line theoremLet be a bounded function of defined on the strip

holomorphic in the interior of the strip and continuous on the whole strip. If

then is a convex function on

In other words, if with then

Applications

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The three-line theorem can be used to prove the Hadamard three-circle theorem for a bounded continuous function on an annulus holomorphic in the interior. Indeed applying the theorem to

shows that, if

then is a convex function of

The three-line theorem also holds for functions with values in a Banach space and plays an important role in complex interpolation theory. It can be used to prove Hölder's inequality for measurable functions

where by considering the function

See also

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References

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  • Hadamard, Jacques (1896), "Sur les fonctions entières" (PDF), Bull. Soc. Math. Fr., 24: 186–187 (the original announcement of the theorem)
  • Reed, Michael; Simon, Barry (1975), Methods of modern mathematical physics, Volume 2: Fourier analysis, self-adjointness, Elsevier, pp. 33–34, ISBN 0-12-585002-6
  • Ullrich, David C. (2008), Complex made simple, Graduate Studies in Mathematics, vol. 97, American Mathematical Society, pp. 386–387, ISBN 978-0-8218-4479-3