Analysis Problem of the Day 39

Today’s problem appeared as Problem 7 on the UCLA Spring 2014 Analysis Qual:

Problem 7: Characterize all entire functions f with |f(z)|>0 for |z| large and \limsup_{z \to \infty} \frac{|\log |f(z)||}{|z|}<\infty.


Solution: Notice that the condition is equivalent to stating that f has finitely many zeros and |f(z)| \leq e^{C|z|}, i.e. f is of exponential type 1. By the Hadamard factorization theorem, it follows that f(z) = z^m e^{az+b} \prod_{i=1}^n (1-\frac{z}{a_i}) = e^{az} p(z) for some constants a,b \in \mathbb{C} and some nonzero polynomial p.

Alternative approach: Divide out by the zeros of f and take the complex logarithm \log f (which is well-defined since f does not vanish). By assumption, g=\log f is an entire function satisfying |g(z)| \leq C|z|. By the polynomial variant of Liouville’s theorem, this implies that g is at most a polynomial of degree 1, i.e. g(z)=az+b. As above, this implies that f(z)= e^{az} p(z).

Remark: If the condition is replaced by \limsup_{z \to \infty} \frac{|\log|f(z)||}{|z|^k}<\infty, it follows that f(z)=p(z)e^{q(z)} where p,q are polynomials and the degree of q is at most k.

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