The Divisor of a meromorphic function #
This file defines the divisor of a meromorphic function and proves the most basic lemmas about those
divisors. The lemma MeromorphicOn.divisor_restrict guarantees compatibility between restrictions
of divisors and of meromorphic functions to subsets of their domain of definition.
Definition of the Divisor #
The divisor of a meromorphic function f, mapping a point z to the order of f at z, and to
zero if the order is infinite.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
Instances For
Definition of the divisor
Simplifier lemma: on U, the divisor of a function f that is meromorphic on U evaluates to
order.untopβ.
Congruence Lemmas #
If fβ is meromorphic on U, if fβ agrees with fβ on a codiscrete subset of U and outside of
U, then fβ and fβ induce the same divisors on U.
If fβ is meromorphic on an open set U, if fβ agrees with fβ on a codiscrete subset of U,
then fβ and fβ induce the same divisors onU.
Divisors of Analytic Functions #
Analytic functions have non-negative divisors.
Behavior under Standard Operations #
If orders are finite, the divisor of the scalar product of two meromorphic functions is the sum of the divisors.
See MeromorphicOn.exists_order_ne_top_iff_forall and
MeromorphicOn.order_ne_top_of_isPreconnected for two convenient criteria to guarantee conditions
hβfβ and hβfβ.
If orders are finite, the divisor of the product of two meromorphic functions is the sum of the divisors.
See MeromorphicOn.exists_order_ne_top_iff_forall and
MeromorphicOn.order_ne_top_of_isPreconnected for two convenient criteria to guarantee conditions
hβfβ and hβfβ.
The divisor of the inverse is the negative of the divisor.
Taking the divisor of a meromorphic function commutes with restriction.
Adding an analytic function to a meromorphic one does not change the pole divisor.
Adding an analytic function to a meromorphic one does not change the pole divisor.