Normed domains of holomorphy (Q963564)
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English | Normed domains of holomorphy |
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Normed domains of holomorphy (English)
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20 April 2010
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The author first shows that any bounded, pseudoconvex, Runge domain \(\Omega \subseteq \mathbb C^{n}\) is convex with respect to the family of bounded holomorphic functions. Next, he says that a domain \(\Omega \subseteq \mathbb C^{n}\) is of type \(HL^{p}\), \(1\leq p\leq \infty\), if there is a holomorphic function \(f \in L^{p}(\Omega)\), which cannot be analytically continued to any larger domain, while if there exists a strictly larger domain \(\Omega\) to which every holomorphic \(L^{p}\) function on \(\Omega\) extends, then \(\Omega\) is of type \(EL^{p}\). He furnishes several sufficient conditions under which \(\Omega\) is of one of the above mentioned types. For example, if \(\Omega \subseteq \mathbb C\) is bounded and the interior of its closure, it is of type \(HL^{p}\). Some other cases where an \( \Omega \subseteq \mathbb C^{n}\) is of type \(HL^{p}\) are: if it is bounded and convex, or if it is bounded, strongly pseudoconvex and with \(\mathcal C ^{2}\)-boundary, or if it is a bounded analytic polyhedron, or if it is a pseudoconvex complete circular domain, or if it is bounded, pseudoconvex with a Stein neighborhood basis. Other properties of \(HL^{p}\) and \(EL^{p}\) domains are investigated and the relation to \(\overline{\partial}\)-problem is studied. The problem of finding characterizations for these types of domains is still open.
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domain of holomorphy
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bounded holomorphic function
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pseudoconvex domain
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analytic continuation
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\(\overline {\partial}\) -problem
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peak points
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