Let Un be a sequence of open sets in C containing 0. Let Vn be the connected component of the interior of Un ∩ Un + 1 ∩ ... containing 0. The kernel of the sequence is defined to be the union of the Vn's, provided it is non-empty; otherwise it is defined to be . Thus the kernel is either a connected open set containing 0 or the one point set . The sequence is said to converge to a kernel if each subsequence has the same kernel.
Examples
If Un is an increasing sequence of connected open sets containing 0, then the kernel is just the union.
If Un is a decreasing sequence of connected open sets containing 0, then, if 0 is an interior point of U1 ∩ U2 ∩ ..., the sequence converges to the component of the interior containing 0. Otherwise, if 0 is not an interior point, the sequence converges to .
Kernel theorem
Let fn(z) be a sequence of holomorphicunivalent functions on the unit disk D, normalised so that fn(0) = 0 and f 'n (0) > 0. Then fn converges uniformly on compacts in D to a function f if and only if Un = fn(D) converges to its kernel and this kernel is not C. If the kernel is , then f = 0. Otherwise the kernel is a connected open set U, f is univalent on D and f(D) = U.
Proof
Using Hurwitz's theorem and Montel's theorem, it is straightforward to check that if fn tends uniformly on compacta to f then each subsequence of Un has kernel U = f(D).
Conversely if Un converges to a kernel not equal to C, then by the Koebe quarter theoremUn contains the disk of radius f 'n(0) / 4 with centre 0. The assumption that U ≠ C implies that these radii are uniformly bounded. By the Koebe distortion theorem
Hence the sequence fn is uniformly bounded on compact sets. If two subsequences converge to holomorphic limits f and g, then f(0) = g(0) and with f'(0), g'(0) ≥ 0. By the first part and the assumptions it follows that f(D) = g(D). Uniqueness in the Riemann mapping theorem forces f = g, so the original sequence fn is uniformly convergent on compact sets.
Duren, P. L. (1983), Univalent functions, Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften, vol. 259, Springer-Verlag, ISBN0-387-90795-5
Pommerenke, C. (1975), Univalent functions, with a chapter on quadratic differentials by Gerd Jensen, Studia Mathematica/Mathematische Lehrbücher, vol. 15, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
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