A geometric property of functions harmonic in a disk (Q1188260)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
A geometric property of functions harmonic in a disk
scientific article

    Statements

    A geometric property of functions harmonic in a disk (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    13 August 1992
    0 references
    Denote by \(\Delta\) the unit disc in \(\mathbb{C}\) and by \(\mathbb{T}\) the unit circle, and let \(f\) be an integrable function on \(\mathbb{T}\). For \(z\in\Delta\) and \(e^{it}\in\mathbb{T}\), define \(\ell(z,t)\) to be such that \(z,e^{it}\) and \(e^{i\ell(z,t)}\) are collinear and write \(z=(1- s(z,t))e^{it}+s(z,t)e^{i\ell(z,t)}\). Let \(\ell_ z(t)\) be the corresponding weighted average of \(f(e^{it})\) and \(f(e^{i\ell(z,t)})\). The main theorem states that the average of \(\ell_ z\) on \(\mathbb{T}\) gives the value of the Poisson transform of \(f\) at \(z\). The proof is entirely computational, making use of nice formulas for \(s(z,t)\), \(\ell(z,t)\) and their derivatives in terms of the Poisson kernel \(P_ x(t)\). Unfortunately it does not provide any geometric insight as to why this result should hold. The theorem can also be interpreted as follows: the two-dimensional Poisson integral of \(f\) is average of one-dimensional Poisson integrals. A generalization of this to higher dimensions is announced.
    0 references
    0 references
    Poisson transform
    0 references
    Poisson kernel
    0 references
    Poisson integrals
    0 references
    0 references