Analysis Problem of the Day 64

Today’s problem appeared as Problem 9 on Texas A&M’s August 2021 Complex Analysis Qual:

Problem 9. Let f be a meromorphic function on \mathbb{C} such that |f(z)| \leq M|z|^n for |z|>R, where z is not a pole, for some integer n and M,R>0. Show that f is a rational function.


Solution: Without loss of generality, suppose 0 is not a pole of f – otherwise, consider \frac{f(z)}{z^k}, where k is the order of the pole of f at 0. Since we are given the behavior of f in a neighborhood of \infty, we consider g(z):=f(\frac{1}{z}). Then, g is a meromorphic function on \mathbb{C} \setminus \{0\} that is bounded at \infty. In particular, if w = \frac{1}{z}, we have that |g(w)| \leq \frac{M}{|w|^n} when w is near 0 and is not a pole of g. Let P be the set of poles of g excluding the origin. The above estimate implies that h(w):=g(w) w^{\max(n+1,0)} is a meromorphic function on \mathbb{C} \setminus \{0\} that extends continuously to be 0 on \mathbb{C} \setminus P. But this implies that |g(w)|<\epsilon in a neighborhood of 0 \in \mathbb{C} \setminus P. Thus, 0 cannot be an accumulation point of P, as \lim_{z \to a} |g(z)|=\infty for any pole a of g. In particular, since g is bounded at \infty and is meromorphic, P must be discrete, i.e. g has finitely many poles. Letting h(w):=\frac{g(w)}{\prod_{k=1}^m (w-a_k)^{n_k}}, where a_1,...,a_m are the poles of g of orders n_1,...,n_m, respectively, one obtains that h is a bounded holomorphic function and therefore constant by Liouville’s theorem. It follows that g is a rational function, so f(z) = g(\frac{1}{z}) is a rational function as well.

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