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On the Automorphic Group of an Entire Function

In: Advancements in Complex Analysis

Author

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  • Ronen Peretz

    (Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Department of Mathematics)

Abstract

This paper develops further the theory of the automorphic group of non-constant entire functions. This theory has already a long history that essentially started with two remarkable papers of Tatsujirô Shimizu that were published in 1931. The elements ϕ(z) of the group are defined by the automorphic equation f(ϕ(z)) = f(z), where f(z) is entire. Tatsujirô Shimizu also refers to the functions of this group as those functions that are determined by f −1 ∘ f. He proved many remarkable properties of those automorphic functions. He indicated how they induce a beautiful geometric structure on the complex plane. Those structures were termed by Tatsujirô Shimizu, the system of normal polygonal domains, and the more refined system of the fundamental domains of f(z). The last system if exists tiles up the complex plane with remarkable geometric tiles that are conformally mapped to one another by the automorphic functions. In the Ph.D thesis of the author, those tiles were also called the system of the maximal domains of f(z). One cannot avoid noticing the many similarities between this automorphic group and its accompanying geometric structures and analytic properties, and the more tame discrete groups that appear in the theory of hyperbolic geometry and also the arithmetic groups in number theory. This paper pursues further the theory initiated by Tatsujirô Shimizu, towards understanding global properties of the automorphic group, rather than just understanding the properties of the individual automorphic functions. We hope to be able in sequel papers to generalize arithmetic and analytic tools such as the Selberg trace formula, to this new setting.

Suggested Citation

  • Ronen Peretz, 2020. "On the Automorphic Group of an Entire Function," Springer Books, in: Daniel Breaz & Michael Th. Rassias (ed.), Advancements in Complex Analysis, pages 363-448, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-40120-7_10
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-40120-7_10
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