The Julia-Carathéodory theorem on the bidisk revisited
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Publication:4591129
DOI10.14232/ACTASM-016-311-XzbMATH Open1389.32017arXiv1610.01962OpenAlexW2964062299WikidataQ122629009 ScholiaQ122629009MaRDI QIDQ4591129FDOQ4591129
John E. McCarthy, James Eldred Pascoe
Publication date: 10 November 2017
Published in: Acta Scientiarum Mathematicarum (Search for Journal in Brave)
Abstract: The Julia quotient measures the ratio of the distance of a function value from the boundary to the distance from the boundary. The Julia-Carath'eodory theorem on the bidisk states that if the Julia quotient is bounded along some sequence of nontangential approach to some point in the torus, the function must have directional derivatives in all directions pointing into the bidisk. The directional derivative, however, need not be a linear function of the direction in that case. In this note, we show that if the Julia quotient is uniformly bounded along every sequence of nontangential approach, the function must have a linear directional derivative. Additionally, we analyze a weaker condition, corresponding to being Lipschitz near the boundary, which implies the existence of a linear directional derivative for rational functions.
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1610.01962
Cited In (7)
- A Julia's Lemma for the symmetrized bidisc 𝔾2
- A controlled tangential Julia-Carathéodory theory via averaged Julia quotients
- Singularities of rational inner functions in higher dimensions
- A note on Julia-Carathéodory theorem for functions with fixed initial coefficients
- Denjoy-Wolff points on the bidisk via models
- The Carathéodory-Julia Theorem and the Network Realization Formula in Two Variables
- A Julia-Carathéodory theorem for hyperbolically monotone mappings in the Hilbert ball
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