Extreme points and support points of conformal mappings
Abstract
There are three types of results in this paper. The first, extending a representation theorem on a conformal mapping that omits two values of equal modulus. This was due to Brickman and Wilken. They constructed a representation as a convex combination with two terms. Our representation constructs convex combinations with unlimited number of terms. In the limit one can think of it as an integration over a probability space with the uniform distribution. The second result determines the sign of L(z0(f(z))2) up to a remainder term which is expressed using a certain integral that involves the L\"owner chain induced by f(z), for a support point f(z) which maximizes L. Here L is a continuous linear functional on H(U), the topological vector space of the holomorphic functions in the unit disk U=\z∈C\,|\,|z|<1\. Such a support point is known to be a slit mapping and f(z0) is the tip of the slit C-f(U). The third demonstrates some properties of support points of the subspace Sn of S. Sn contains all the polynomials in S of degree n or less. For instance such a support point p(z) has a zero of its derivative p'(z) on ∂ U.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.