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pole (Definition)

Let $U \subset \mathbb{C}$ be a domain and let $a \in \mathbb{C}$ . A function $f: U \longrightarrow \mathbb{C}$ has a pole at $a$ if it can be represented by a Laurent series centered about $a$ with only finitely many terms of negative exponent; that is, $$ f(z) = \sum_{k=-n}^\infty c_k (z-a)^k $$ in some nonempty deleted neighborhood of $a$ , with $c_{-n} \neq 0$ , for some $n \in \mathbb{N}$ . The number $n$ is called the order of the pole.




"pole" is owned by djao.
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See Also: essential singularity

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Cross-references: order, number, deleted neighborhood, exponent, negative, terms, Laurent series, function, domain
There are 33 references to this entry.

This is version 3 of pole, born on 2002-01-04, modified 2004-12-01.
Object id is 1200, canonical name is Pole.
Accessed 6352 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC30D30 (Functions of a complex variable :: Entire and meromorphic functions, and related topics :: Meromorphic functions, general theory)

Pending Errata and Addenda
1. simple pole, simple by pahio on 2009-11-04 13:47:30
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