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Residue Calculation in Complex Analysis

This document discusses finding the residue of complex functions at poles. It provides four rules for determining the residue based on the order of the pole. Rule I is for a simple pole of order 1. Rule II is for a pole of order 2. Rule III generalizes to poles of any order N. Rule IV gives the residue of a quotient function f(z)=g(z)/h(z) at a simple pole where g(z0)≠0 and h(z0)=0. The document also provides examples of applying the rules to find residues at various poles.

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Ammar Ajmal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
308 views7 pages

Residue Calculation in Complex Analysis

This document discusses finding the residue of complex functions at poles. It provides four rules for determining the residue based on the order of the pole. Rule I is for a simple pole of order 1. Rule II is for a pole of order 2. Rule III generalizes to poles of any order N. Rule IV gives the residue of a quotient function f(z)=g(z)/h(z) at a simple pole where g(z0)≠0 and h(z0)=0. The document also provides examples of applying the rules to find residues at various poles.

Uploaded by

Ammar Ajmal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Complex Variables 6.

3 Finding the Residue


Pole ! Oder of the Pole ! Residue !
If f(z) has a pole of order N at z0, then

has the Taylor series expansion:

For instance: pole of order N=1 at z0:

and

c1

RULE I (Residues) If f(z) has a pole of order 1 at z = z0, then


Pole of order N=2 at z0:

and

RULE II (Residues) If f(z) has a pole of order 2 at z=z0,


More General:
RULE III (Residues) If f(z) has a pole of order N at z=z0,

Complex Variables
If N is uncertain:
Guess Nt < N infinite result (not a residue)
Guess Nt N - obtain residue by chance

Residue for a quotient:


Let f(z) has a simple pole at z0 and g(z0) 0, h(z0) = 0 (Rule I):

Using L'Hopital's rule:

If N =1:
RULE IV (Residues) The residue of f(z)=g(z)/h(z) at a simple pole, where g(z0) 0, h(z0)
= 0 , is given by

Complex Variables
EXAMPLE 1 Find the residue of

at all poles
Solution. Factorization gives:
so: pole of the order 1: z = i ; pole of the order 2: z = 0
By Rule I (at +i):
By Rule IV (at i): g(z)=ez/z2 ( g(-i)0 ) and h(z)=z2+1 (h(z)=2z)

By Rule II (at 0)

Complex Variables
EXAMPLE 2 Find the residue of

at all singularities of tan z.


Solution. Rewrite:

f ( z)

sin z
cos z z 2 z 1

Poles: cos z = 0 (z =/2+k , k = 0, 1, 2, ) of the order 1 (simple poles):


zeros of the order 1 f(z) poles of the order 1.
By Rule IV: and g(z)=sin z/(z2+z+1) and h(z)=cos z

Rule I also can by used.


4

Complex Variables
EXAMPLE 3 Find the residue of

at all poles. Use the principal branch of z1/2.


Solution. Factorization:

Pole of the order 1: z = 0 ??


But! This is not an isolated singularity, this is a branch point.

Pole of the order 2: z = 2 !! By Rule II (principal branch of z1/2):

Complex Variables
EXAMPLE 4 Find the residue of

at all singularities.

Solution. A simple pole at z =1: Apply Rule I gives: Res [f(z),1]= -e.
An essential singularity at z =0 , since:
So,

And

e 1 z 1 Or: Re s f ( z),0 c1 e 1

EXAMPLE 5 Find the residue of


Solution. Expand both numerator and denominator around z=0:

Complex Variables
So,
z 2

z 0

This is a pole of order 2 (Rule II: use LHopitals rule successively.?)

But !

z z2
1 ...
1
z 2 1 z 1 .... Res[ f ( z ),0] c 1
f ( z ) 2 2! 2 3!
1

2!
2
z
z
1 ...
5

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