Let be a domain, , and a holomorphic function. A Laurent expansion of around is a representation of as a Laurent Series:
with , which converges on a punctured disk (i.e., excluding the center ) around .
A more general case than the above is the following: Let be two radii (the expansion around a point corresponds to ), and let
be an annulus around . If is a holomorphic function, then the Laurent Series
with is a Laurent expansion of on , provided the series converges for all .
Every holomorphic function on possesses a Laurent expansion around . Coefficients with exist and can be calculated with
for any radius with .
The coefficients are uniquely determined by:
Proof of Existence and Uniqueness of a Laurent Expansion
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The uniqueness follows from the identity theorem for Laurent Series. For existence, choose with and such that . Let be arbitrary. "Cut" the annulus at two points using radii and such that the cycle can be expressed as the sum of two closed, null-homotopic curves and . Choose and such that is enclosed by . By the Cauchy Integral Theorem, we have:
and
since does not enclose . Hence, due to , we obtain:
We now expand for using:
This series converges absolutely for , yielding:
Similarly, for the inner circle , we expand and calculate analogously. The final result shows that for , the Laurent series converges, proving the existence of the Laurent expansion.
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