Specific proof technique of the complex Stone-Weierstrass theorem












2














The question is as follows:




If $f:mathbb{T}rightarrowmathbb{C}$ is continuous, prove that there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $mathbb{T}$ denotes the unit circle.) I've seen proofs of the more general statement of the complex version (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem#Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem,_complex_version), but this is asked in the context of a first course in complex analysis, so we have not developed the foundation to even understand the more general statement. We are given the following hint, however.




Let $g(re^{itheta})=P_r(f)$ and show that for each $r<1$ there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_n$ converge uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $P_r(f)$ denotes the Poisson kernel.) Here are my specific questions:



1) Can we prove this by simply writing $f$ as $f=u+iv$ for some real-valued, continuous functions $u$ and $v$ and then applying the real version of Stone-Weierstrass? I.e. approximating $u$ and $v$ with polynomials of real variables and claiming that the supremum norm of $f$ minus the sum of these polynomials is arbitrarily small? (Applying the fact that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable.)



2) If the above is an invalid approach, how does introducing the Poisson kernel fix the logical error (as what I'm proposing is a similar idea to the hint)?





It is quite possible that I just have a fundamental misunderstanding of the Poisson kernel. Maybe my claim in 1) that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable is dependent on the Poisson kernel?



The purpose of this post is to request assistance in interpreting this problem (and required tools to prove it), not to ask for a solution.










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  • $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
    – zhw.
    Nov 25 at 1:13










  • @zhw. ...why not?
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 1:15










  • @Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
    – Idonknow
    Nov 25 at 3:43










  • @Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 3:51
















2














The question is as follows:




If $f:mathbb{T}rightarrowmathbb{C}$ is continuous, prove that there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $mathbb{T}$ denotes the unit circle.) I've seen proofs of the more general statement of the complex version (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem#Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem,_complex_version), but this is asked in the context of a first course in complex analysis, so we have not developed the foundation to even understand the more general statement. We are given the following hint, however.




Let $g(re^{itheta})=P_r(f)$ and show that for each $r<1$ there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_n$ converge uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $P_r(f)$ denotes the Poisson kernel.) Here are my specific questions:



1) Can we prove this by simply writing $f$ as $f=u+iv$ for some real-valued, continuous functions $u$ and $v$ and then applying the real version of Stone-Weierstrass? I.e. approximating $u$ and $v$ with polynomials of real variables and claiming that the supremum norm of $f$ minus the sum of these polynomials is arbitrarily small? (Applying the fact that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable.)



2) If the above is an invalid approach, how does introducing the Poisson kernel fix the logical error (as what I'm proposing is a similar idea to the hint)?





It is quite possible that I just have a fundamental misunderstanding of the Poisson kernel. Maybe my claim in 1) that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable is dependent on the Poisson kernel?



The purpose of this post is to request assistance in interpreting this problem (and required tools to prove it), not to ask for a solution.










share|cite|improve this question






















  • $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
    – zhw.
    Nov 25 at 1:13










  • @zhw. ...why not?
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 1:15










  • @Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
    – Idonknow
    Nov 25 at 3:43










  • @Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 3:51














2












2








2







The question is as follows:




If $f:mathbb{T}rightarrowmathbb{C}$ is continuous, prove that there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $mathbb{T}$ denotes the unit circle.) I've seen proofs of the more general statement of the complex version (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem#Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem,_complex_version), but this is asked in the context of a first course in complex analysis, so we have not developed the foundation to even understand the more general statement. We are given the following hint, however.




Let $g(re^{itheta})=P_r(f)$ and show that for each $r<1$ there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_n$ converge uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $P_r(f)$ denotes the Poisson kernel.) Here are my specific questions:



1) Can we prove this by simply writing $f$ as $f=u+iv$ for some real-valued, continuous functions $u$ and $v$ and then applying the real version of Stone-Weierstrass? I.e. approximating $u$ and $v$ with polynomials of real variables and claiming that the supremum norm of $f$ minus the sum of these polynomials is arbitrarily small? (Applying the fact that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable.)



2) If the above is an invalid approach, how does introducing the Poisson kernel fix the logical error (as what I'm proposing is a similar idea to the hint)?





It is quite possible that I just have a fundamental misunderstanding of the Poisson kernel. Maybe my claim in 1) that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable is dependent on the Poisson kernel?



The purpose of this post is to request assistance in interpreting this problem (and required tools to prove it), not to ask for a solution.










share|cite|improve this question













The question is as follows:




If $f:mathbb{T}rightarrowmathbb{C}$ is continuous, prove that there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $mathbb{T}$ denotes the unit circle.) I've seen proofs of the more general statement of the complex version (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem#Stone%E2%80%93Weierstrass_theorem,_complex_version), but this is asked in the context of a first course in complex analysis, so we have not developed the foundation to even understand the more general statement. We are given the following hint, however.




Let $g(re^{itheta})=P_r(f)$ and show that for each $r<1$ there is a sequence of polynomials $p_n(z,bar{z})$ such that $p_n$ converge uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$.




(Note: $P_r(f)$ denotes the Poisson kernel.) Here are my specific questions:



1) Can we prove this by simply writing $f$ as $f=u+iv$ for some real-valued, continuous functions $u$ and $v$ and then applying the real version of Stone-Weierstrass? I.e. approximating $u$ and $v$ with polynomials of real variables and claiming that the supremum norm of $f$ minus the sum of these polynomials is arbitrarily small? (Applying the fact that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable.)



2) If the above is an invalid approach, how does introducing the Poisson kernel fix the logical error (as what I'm proposing is a similar idea to the hint)?





It is quite possible that I just have a fundamental misunderstanding of the Poisson kernel. Maybe my claim in 1) that polynomials in 2 real variables can be transformed into polynomials in complex conjugates of 1 variable is dependent on the Poisson kernel?



The purpose of this post is to request assistance in interpreting this problem (and required tools to prove it), not to ask for a solution.







real-analysis complex-analysis uniform-convergence weierstrass-approximation






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asked Nov 24 at 21:07









Atsina

791116




791116












  • $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
    – zhw.
    Nov 25 at 1:13










  • @zhw. ...why not?
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 1:15










  • @Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
    – Idonknow
    Nov 25 at 3:43










  • @Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 3:51


















  • $p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
    – zhw.
    Nov 25 at 1:13










  • @zhw. ...why not?
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 1:15










  • @Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
    – Idonknow
    Nov 25 at 3:43










  • @Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
    – Atsina
    Nov 25 at 3:51
















$p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
– zhw.
Nov 25 at 1:13




$p_nrightarrow f$ uniformly for every $zinmathbb{T}$. that doesn't really make sense.
– zhw.
Nov 25 at 1:13












@zhw. ...why not?
– Atsina
Nov 25 at 1:15




@zhw. ...why not?
– Atsina
Nov 25 at 1:15












@Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
– Idonknow
Nov 25 at 3:43




@Atsina what is your definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}?$
– Idonknow
Nov 25 at 3:43












@Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
– Atsina
Nov 25 at 3:51




@Idonknow A sequence of complex numbers ${z_1,z_2,cdots}$ converges to $winmathbb{C}$ if $lim_{nrightarrowinfty}|z_n-w|=0$? I mean, there are plenty of equivalent definitions and theorems involving them, but this is probably the simplest definition of convergence in $mathbb{C}$
– Atsina
Nov 25 at 3:51















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