Cauchy's Integral Theorem
Cauchy's Integral Theorem is one of two fundamental
results in complex analysis due to Augustin Louis Cauchy.
It states that if is a complex-differentiable
function in some simply connected region
,
and
is a path in
of finite length whose endpoints are
identical, then
The other result, which is arbitrarily distinguished from
this one as Cauchy's Integral Formula, says that under
the same premises if
is a circle of center
with
counteclockwise direction, then
Contents
Proofs
Proof 1
We will prove the theorem for the case when is a triangle.
We leave it as an exercise to verify that all other paths can be
sufficiently approximated with triangles.
Lemma. Cauchy's Integral Theorem holds when is a constant
function.
Proof. Let be a triangle; let
,
, and
be its vertices,
Let
a mapping of
onto
such that
,
,
, and such that
is linear on each of these subintervals. Let
be the constant
value of
. Then
Now we prove the main result.
We construct a sequence parths , recursively,
as follows. Let
be the vertices of
, and let
,
,
be the respective midpoints of
,
,
. Then
We choose
from the paths
,
,
,
so that the quantity
is maximal. Then
so that
Let denote the longest side length in the triangle
;
let
denote the perimeter of
.
Then
and
.
Let denote the closed region bounded by
. Since
is a descending chain of nonempty closed sets,
the set
is not empty, so let us choose
some
that is an element of
, for all
.
The function is differentiable at the point
, so
for every
, there exists an
such that
for all
for which
,
If we pick
such that
, then this inequality
holds for all
. By the lemma,
Now, let
be a parameterization of
such that
for all
.
Then
Therefore
Since
can be arbitrarily small, it follows that
whence
as desired.
Proof 2
We use Green's Theorem.
Let denote the real numbers such that
. Let
Let
and
be the functions mapping
into
such that
. Then
Now, since
is complex-differentiable,
Let
be the region bounded by
. Then by Green's theorem,
and similarly,
Thus Cauchy's theorem holds.
Meaning
The Cauchy Integral Theorem guarantees that the integral of a
function over a path depends only on the
endpoints of a path, provided the function in question is
complex-differentiable in all the areas bounded by the paths. Indeed,
if and
are two paths from
to
, then