In mathematics, more precisely in the theory of functions of several complex variables, a pseudoconvex set is a special type of open set in the n-dimensional complex space Cn. Pseudoconvex sets are important, as they allow for classification of domains of holomorphy.
Let
be a domain, that is, an open connected subset. One says that is pseudoconvex (or Hartogs pseudoconvex) if there exists a continuous plurisubharmonic function on such that the set
is a relatively compact subset of for all real numbers In other words, a domain is pseudoconvex if has a continuous plurisubharmonic exhaustion function. Every (geometrically) convex set is pseudoconvex. However, there are pseudoconvex domains which are not geometrically convex.
When has a (twice continuously differentiable) boundary, this notion is the same as Levi pseudoconvexity, which is easier to work with. More specifically, with a boundary, it can be shown that has a defining function; i.e., that there exists which is so that , and . Now, is pseudoconvex iff for every and in the complex tangent space at p, that is,
- , we have
If does not have a boundary, the following approximation result can be useful.
Proposition 1 If is pseudoconvex, then there exist bounded, strongly Levi pseudoconvex domains with (smooth) boundary which are relatively compact in , such that
This is because once we have a as in the definition we can actually find a C∞ exhaustion function.
The case n = 1
In one complex dimension, every open domain is pseudoconvex. The concept of pseudoconvexity is thus more useful in dimensions higher than 1.
See also
- Holomorphically convex hull
- Stein manifold
- Analytic polyhedron
- Eugenio Elia Levi
References
- Lars Hörmander, An Introduction to Complex Analysis in Several Variables, North-Holland, 1990. (ISBN 0-444-88446-7).
- Steven G. Krantz. Function Theory of Several Complex Variables, AMS Chelsea Publishing, Providence, Rhode Island, 1992.
External links
- Range, R. Michael (February 2012), "WHAT IS...a Pseudoconvex Domain?" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 59 (2): 301–303, doi:10.1090/noti798
- "Pseudo-convex and pseudo-concave", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]