Pointwise conditions for analyticity and polynomiality of infinitely differentiable functions (Q1825299)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Pointwise conditions for analyticity and polynomiality of infinitely differentiable functions |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4120450
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Pointwise conditions for analyticity and polynomiality of infinitely differentiable functions |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4120450 |
Statements
Pointwise conditions for analyticity and polynomiality of infinitely differentiable functions (English)
0 references
1989
0 references
In this interesting paper the authors pose some problems that arise from the following classical results: Theorem 1 (R. P. Boas jun., 1935). Suppose \(f\in C^{\infty}(I)\) where I is a real interval. Suppose further that, for some \(r>0\), the sequence \(r^ n(f^{(n)}(x)/n!)\) is bounded, for each \(x\in I\). Then f is analytic on I. Theorem 2 (E. Corominas and F. Sunyer Balaguer, 1954). Suppose \(f\in C^{\infty}(I)\). If, for each \(x\in I\), there is a nonnegative integer \(n=n(x)\) such that \(f^{(n)}(x)=0\), then f is a polynomial. In the paper under review multivariate analogues of both theorems are given as well as their improvements in rather different directions. Reviewer's remark: The authors conjecture the following: Suppose D is a connected open subset of \({\mathbb{R}}^ n\), \(f\in C^{\infty}(D)\) and that, for each \(x\in D\), there is some \(m=m(x)\in {\mathbb{N}}\) such that \(f^{\alpha}(x)=0\) for all \(\alpha \in {\mathbb{N}}^ n\) satisfying \(| \alpha | =n\). Then f is a polynomial. Note that this easily follows from Theorem 2 and from the fact that a function (on \({\mathbb{R}}^ n)\) that is a polynomial with respect to each variable separately must be a polynomial.
0 references
analyticity
0 references
polynomiality
0 references
infinitely differentiable functions
0 references
0.9202645
0 references
0.8911378
0 references
0 references
0.87976336
0 references
0.87860364
0 references
0.8760005
0 references