Spaces of holomorphic functions in regular domains (Q2518759)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Spaces of holomorphic functions in regular domains
scientific article

    Statements

    Spaces of holomorphic functions in regular domains (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    16 January 2009
    0 references
    A domain \(\Omega\subset\mathbb{C}\) is regular if it coincides with the interior of its closure. For a regular domain \(\Omega\), we denote by \({\mathcal O}_f(\Omega)\) the linear space of functions \(f\) holomorphic in \(\Omega\) such that, for every \(n\in\mathbb{N}\), the derivative \(f^{(n)}\) extends continuously to the closure \(\overline\Omega\), equipped with the natural Fréchet topology. The main rsult is the following Theorem 3. There exists a dense, nearly-Baire subspace \(F\) in \({\mathcal O}_f(\Omega)\) such that if \(f\) is a non-zero element of \(F\), then \(f\) does not extend holomorphically outside \(\Omega\). In this theorem \(\Omega\) is supposed to be regular. A function \(f\) holomorphic in \(\Omega\) does not extend outside \(\Omega\) if there is no \(\Omega_1\nsupseteqq\Omega\) such that \(f\) holomorphically extends to \(\Omega_1\). A topological vector space \(E\) is nearly-Baire if given a sequence \(\{A_j\}\) of sum-absorbing balanced closed subsets which cover \(E\), then there exists \(j\) such that \(A_j\) has a non-empty interior. A subset \(A\subset E\) is sum-absorbing if there exists \(\lambda> 0\) such that \(\lambda(A+ A)\subset A\).
    0 references
    holomorphic function
    0 references
    topological vector space
    0 references

    Identifiers