Talk:Cauchy–Hadamard theorem

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What the fuck is this:

"The proof can be found in the book Introduction to Complex Analysis Part II functions in several Variables by B.V.Shabat"

I don't thinks this is the place for publicity

Multivariable version reference?

Could we get a reference for the multivariable version of the theorem? 218.208.8.112 (talk) 02:50, 28 September 2020 (UTC)

: I added a proof 121.121.60.56 (talk) 04:48, 1 October 2020 (UTC)

::The proof does not include the cases when R=0 or R=+infinity. 160.216.151.232 (talk) 17:36, 20 April 2023 (UTC)

What is a multi-index raised to a multi-index power?

The section Theorem for several complex variables contains this passage:

"Let \alpha be a multi-index (a n-tuple of integers) with |\alpha|=\alpha_1+\cdots+\alpha_n, then f(x) converges with radius of convergence \rho (which is also a multi-index) if and only if"

\limsup_{|\alpha|\to\infty} \sqrt[|\alpha|]{|c_\alpha|\rho^\alpha}=1

to the multidimensional power series

\sum_{\alpha\geq0}c_\alpha(z-a)^\alpha := \sum_{\alpha_1\geq0,\ldots,\alpha_n\geq0}c_{\alpha_1,\ldots,\alpha_n}(z_1-a_1)^{\alpha_1}\cdots(z_n-a_n)^{\alpha_n}''"

I can try to guess what 𝝆𝛼 might be.

But it is much, much, much better if the article explained exactly what 𝝆𝛼 means, where both 𝝆 and 𝛼 are multi-indexes.

I hope someone knowledgeable about this subject can insert a definition.

:I have added a definition of both. I removed the reference to "multi-index" and replaced it with the concept of a vector, which I hope is more precise. I changed the notation from |\alpha| to ||\alpha|| to avoid the confusion with |c_a| which mean different things as I believe c_a is not a vector. I found this notation used in Fuks Theory of Analytic Functions of Several Complex Variables which you can find in the [https://openlibrary.org/books/OL5883849M/Theory_of_analytic_functions_of_several_complex_variables. openlibrary] pp. 48. It is an old text, so I hope the notation is not out of date. I am not 100% sure that \alpha is a vector of natural numbers. Dom walden (talk) 08:05, 7 April 2024 (UTC)