Maximum modulus principle

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In mathematics, the maximum modulus principle in complex analysis states that if f is a holomorphic function, then the modulus |f | cannot exhibit a true local maximum within the domain of f. In other words, either f is a constant function, or, for any point z0 inside the domain of f there exist other points arbitrarily close to z0 at which |f | takes larger values.

This entails for example the consequence that if f is defined and holomorphic in the closed unit disk D, the maximum of |f | (which is certainly defined and attained somewhere because |f | is continuous and the closed disk is a compact space) is attained on the unit circle C.

Mathematically, this can be formulated as follows. Let f be defined on some open subset D of the complex plane C. If z0 is a point in D such that

<math>|f(z_0)|\ge |f(z)|</math>

for all z in a neighborhood of z0, then the function f is constant on D.

Sketch of the proof

One uses the equality

log f(z) = log |f(z)| + i arg f(z)

for complex natural logarithms to deduce that log |f(z)| is a harmonic function. Since z0 is a local maximum for this function also, it follows from the maximum principle that |f(z)| is constant, and with some more work we find that f(z) is constant as well.

By switching to the reciprocal, we can get the minimum modulus principle. It states that if f is holomorphic within a bounded domain D, continuous up to the boundary of D, and non-zero at all points, then the modulus |f (z)| takes its minimum value on the boundary of D.