Weierstrass Preparation Theorem
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In
mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the Weierstrass preparation theorem is a tool for dealing with
analytic function In mathematics, an analytic function is a function that is locally given by a convergent power series. There exist both real analytic functions and complex analytic functions. Functions of each type are infinitely differentiable, but complex ...
s of
several complex variables The theory of functions of several complex variables is the branch of mathematics dealing with functions defined on the complex coordinate space \mathbb C^n, that is, -tuples of complex numbers. The name of the field dealing with the properties ...
, at a given point ''P''. It states that such a function is,
up to Two Mathematical object, mathematical objects and are called "equal up to an equivalence relation " * if and are related by , that is, * if holds, that is, * if the equivalence classes of and with respect to are equal. This figure of speech ...
multiplication by a function not zero at ''P'', a
polynomial In mathematics, a polynomial is a Expression (mathematics), mathematical expression consisting of indeterminate (variable), indeterminates (also called variable (mathematics), variables) and coefficients, that involves only the operations of addit ...
in one fixed variable ''z'', which is monic, and whose
coefficient In mathematics, a coefficient is a Factor (arithmetic), multiplicative factor involved in some Summand, term of a polynomial, a series (mathematics), series, or any other type of expression (mathematics), expression. It may be a Dimensionless qu ...
s of lower degree terms are analytic functions in the remaining variables and zero at ''P''. There are also a number of variants of the theorem, that extend the idea of factorization in some ring ''R'' as ''u''·''w'', where ''u'' is a unit and ''w'' is some sort of distinguished Weierstrass polynomial. Carl Siegel has disputed the attribution of the theorem to
Weierstrass Karl Theodor Wilhelm Weierstrass (; ; 31 October 1815 – 19 February 1897) was a German mathematician often cited as the " father of modern analysis". Despite leaving university without a degree, he studied mathematics and trained as a school t ...
, saying that it occurred under the current name in some of late nineteenth century ''Traités d'analyse'' without justification.


Complex analytic functions

For one variable, the local form of an analytic function ''f''(''z'') near 0 is ''z''''k''''h''(''z'') where ''h''(0) is not 0, and ''k'' is the order of the zero of ''f'' at 0. This is the result that the preparation theorem generalises. We pick out one variable ''z'', which we may assume is first, and write our complex variables as (''z'', ''z''2, ..., ''zn''). A Weierstrass polynomial ''W''(''z'') is :''zk'' + ''g''''k''−1''z''''k''−1 + ... + ''g''0 where ''g''''i''(''z''2, ..., ''zn'') is analytic and ''g''''i''(0, ..., 0) = 0. Then the theorem states that for analytic functions ''f'', if :''f''(0, ...,0) = 0, and :''f''(''z'', ''z''2, ..., ''zn'') as a
power series In mathematics, a power series (in one variable) is an infinite series of the form \sum_^\infty a_n \left(x - c\right)^n = a_0 + a_1 (x - c) + a_2 (x - c)^2 + \dots where ''a_n'' represents the coefficient of the ''n''th term and ''c'' is a co ...
has some term only involving ''z'', we can write (locally near (0, ..., 0)) :''f''(''z'', ''z''2, ..., ''zn'') = ''W''(''z'')''h''(''z'', ''z''2, ..., ''zn'') with ''h'' analytic and ''h''(0, ..., 0) not 0, and ''W ''a Weierstrass polynomial. This has the immediate consequence that the set of zeros of ''f'', near (0, ..., 0), can be found by fixing any small values of ''z''2, ..., ''zn'' and then solving the equation ''W(z)=0''. The corresponding values of ''z'' form a number of continuously-varying ''branches'', in number equal to the degree of ''W'' in ''z''. In particular ''f'' cannot have an isolated zero.


Division theorem

A related result is the Weierstrass division theorem, which states that if ''f'' and ''g'' are analytic functions, and ''g'' is a Weierstrass polynomial of degree ''N'', then there exists a unique pair ''h'' and ''j'' such that ''f'' = ''gh'' + ''j'', where ''j'' is a polynomial of degree less than ''N''. In fact, many authors prove the Weierstrass preparation as a corollary of the division theorem. It is also possible to prove the division theorem from the preparation theorem so that the two theorems are actually equivalent.


Applications

The Weierstrass preparation theorem can be used to show that the ring of germs of analytic functions in ''n'' variables is a Noetherian ring, which is also referred to as the ''Rückert basis theorem''.


Smooth functions

There is a deeper preparation theorem for
smooth function In mathematical analysis, the smoothness of a function is a property measured by the number of continuous derivatives (''differentiability class)'' it has over its domain. A function of class C^k is a function of smoothness at least ; t ...
s, due to Bernard Malgrange, called the Malgrange preparation theorem. It also has an associated division theorem, named after John Mather.


Formal power series in complete local rings

There is an analogous result, also referred to as the Weierstrass preparation theorem, for the ring of
formal power series In mathematics, a formal series is an infinite sum that is considered independently from any notion of convergence, and can be manipulated with the usual algebraic operations on series (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, partial su ...
over complete local rings ''A'': for any power series f = \sum_^\infty a_n t^n \in A t such that not all a_n are in the
maximal ideal In mathematics, more specifically in ring theory, a maximal ideal is an ideal that is maximal (with respect to set inclusion) amongst all ''proper'' ideals. In other words, ''I'' is a maximal ideal of a ring ''R'' if there are no other ideals ...
\mathfrak m of ''A'', there is a unique unit ''u'' in A t and a polynomial ''F'' of the form F=t^s + b_ t^ + \dots + b_0 with b_i \in \mathfrak m (a so-called distinguished polynomial) such that :f = uF. Since A t is again a complete local ring, the result can be iterated and therefore gives similar factorization results for formal power series in several variables. For example, this applies to the ring of integers in a p-adic field. In this case the theorem says that a power series ''f''(''z'') can always be uniquely factored as π''n''·''u''(''z'')·''p''(''z''), where ''u''(''z'') is a unit in the ring of power series, ''p''(''z'') is a distinguished polynomial (monic, with the coefficients of the non-leading terms each in the maximal ideal), and π is a fixed uniformizer. An application of the Weierstrass preparation and division theorem for the ring \mathbf Z_p t (also called Iwasawa algebra) occurs in
Iwasawa theory In number theory, Iwasawa theory is the study of objects of arithmetic interest over infinite Tower of fields, towers of number fields. It began as a Galois module theory of ideal class groups, initiated by (), as part of the theory of cyclotomic ...
in the description of finitely generated modules over this ring. There exists a non-commutative version of Weierstrass division and preparation, with ''A'' being a not necessarily commutative ring, and with formal skew power series in place of formal power series.


Tate algebras

There is also a Weierstrass preparation theorem for Tate algebras :T_n(k) = \left \ over a complete non-archimedean field ''k''. These algebras are the basic building blocks of rigid geometry. One application of this form of the Weierstrass preparation theorem is the fact that the rings T_n(k) are
Noetherian In mathematics, the adjective Noetherian is used to describe objects that satisfy an ascending or descending chain condition on certain kinds of subobjects, meaning that certain ascending or descending sequences of subobjects must have finite leng ...
.


See also

* Oka coherence theorem


References

* *, reprinted in * * * reprinted by Johnson, New York, 1967.


External links

*{{cite web , last1=Lebl , first1=Jiří , title=Weierstrass Preparation and Division Theorems. (2021, September 5). , url=https://math.libretexts.org/@go/page/74245 , website=LibreTexts, date=6 July 2021 Several complex variables Commutative algebra Theorems in complex analysis