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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