On the Hardy number of a domain in terms of harmonic measure and hyperbolic distance (Q2210774): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Created a new Item |
Changed an Item |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Dmitry Vladimirovich Prokhorov / rank | |||
Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Dmitry Vladimirovich Prokhorov / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / MaRDI profile type | |||
Property / MaRDI profile type: MaRDI publication profile / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / arXiv ID | |||
Property / arXiv ID: 1908.11845 / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
links / mardi / name | links / mardi / name | ||
Latest revision as of 02:23, 19 April 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | On the Hardy number of a domain in terms of harmonic measure and hyperbolic distance |
scientific article |
Statements
On the Hardy number of a domain in terms of harmonic measure and hyperbolic distance (English)
0 references
8 November 2020
0 references
The author establishes the Hardy number of a domain in terms of harmonic measure and hyperbolic distance. For a domain \(D\subset\mathbb C\) and \(z\in D\) and a Borel subset \(E\) of the closure \(\overline D\) of \(D\), let \(\omega_D(z,E)\) be the harmonic measure at \(z\) of \(\overline E\) with respect to the component of \(D\setminus\overline E\) containing \(z\), and let \(d_D(z,w)\) be the hyperbolic distance between \(z\) and \(w\) in \(E\) for a simply connected domain \(D\ne\mathbb C\). Denote by \(\psi\) a conformal map on the unit disk \(\mathbb D=\{z\in\mathbb C:|z|<1\}\), \(\psi(0)=0\), and \(F_{\alpha}=\{z\in\mathbb D:|\psi(z)|=\alpha\}\), \(\alpha>0\). The Hardy number of \(\psi\) is given by \(h(\psi)=\sup\{p>0: \psi\in H^p(\mathbb D)\}\), where \(H^p(\mathbb D)\) is the Hardy space on \(\mathbb D\). The following theorem expresses \(h(\psi)\) in terms of the hyperbolic distance. Theorem 1.1. If \(h(\psi)\) denotes the Hardy number of \(\psi\), then \[h(\psi)=\liminf_{\alpha\to+\infty}\frac{d_{\mathbb D}(0,F_{\alpha})}{\log\alpha}.\] Denote \[L=\lim_{\alpha\to+\infty}(\log\omega_{\mathbb D}(0,F_{\alpha})^{-1}/\log\alpha),\;\;\;\mu=\lim_{\alpha\to+\infty}(d_{\mathbb D}(0,F_{\alpha})/\log\alpha).\] Theorem 1.3. If \(\mu\) exists, then \(L\) exists and \(L=\mu\). Let \(N(\alpha)\in\mathbb N\cup\{\infty\}\) denote the number of components of \(F_{\alpha}\), \(\alpha>0\), and let \(F_{\alpha}^i\) denote each of these components, \(i=1,\dots,N(\alpha)\). Denote by \(F_{\alpha}^*\) a component of \(F_{\alpha}\) such that \(\omega_{\mathbb D}(0,F_{\alpha}^*)=\max_i\{\omega_{\mathbb D}(0,F_{\alpha}^i)\}\). Theorem 1.5. If \(L\) exists, then \(\mu\) exists if and only if \[\limsup_{\alpha\to+\infty}\frac{\log_{\mathbb D}\omega(0,F_{\alpha}^*)^{-1}}{\log\alpha}=L.\] If \(\mu\) exists, then \(\mu=L\).
0 references
Hardy number
0 references
Hardy space
0 references
hyperbolic distance
0 references
harmonic measure
0 references
conformal mapping
0 references