Primeness in divisor sense for certain entire functions (Q798799): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 09:37, 9 December 2024
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English | Primeness in divisor sense for certain entire functions |
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Primeness in divisor sense for certain entire functions (English)
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1984
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An entire function F(z), with zeros, is said to be prime in divisor sense, if, for every identical relation such as \(F(z)=f(g(z))\exp (A(z)),\) where f,g (\(\not\equiv const.)\) and A are entire functions, we can deduce the following assertion: f has just one simple zero or g is a linear polynomial. A divisor D, a discrete countable set in \({\mathbb{C}}\), is said to be prime, if an entire function f(z) whose zeros-set is identical with D is prime in divisor sense, as in the definition above. The author proves: Theorem 1. Let P(z) be a polynomial. Then the function \(F(z)=z+P(\exp z)\) is prime in divisor sense. - Theorem 2. Let P(z) and Q(z) be two nonconstant polynomials. Assume that, for any natural number k and C, the function \(\exp (-kz)[Q(\exp z)+C]\) is nonconstant. Then \(F(z)=P(z)+Q(\exp z)\) is prime in divisor sense.
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prime in divisor sense
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