In the theory of functions of several complex variables, a branch of mathematics, a polydisc is a Cartesian product of discs.

More specifically, if we denote by the open disc of center z and radius r in the complex plane, then an open polydisc is a set of the form

It can be equivalently written as

One should not confuse the polydisc with the open ball in Cn, which is defined as

Here, the norm is the Euclidean distance in Cn.

When , open balls and open polydiscs are not biholomorphically equivalent, that is, there is no biholomorphic mapping between the two. This was proven by Poincaré in 1907 by showing that their automorphism groups have different dimensions as Lie groups.[1]

When the term bidisc is sometimes used.

A polydisc is an example of logarithmically convex Reinhardt domain.

References

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  1. ^ Poincare, H, Les fonctions analytiques de deux variables et la representation conforme, Rend. Circ. Mat. Palermo23 (1907), 185-220
  • Steven G Krantz (Jan 1, 2002). Function Theory of Several Complex Variables. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-2724-3.
  • John P D'Angelo, D'Angelo P D'Angelo (Jan 6, 1993). Several Complex Variables and the Geometry of Real Hypersurfaces. CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-8272-6.

This article incorporates material from polydisc on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

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Hermitian symmetric space

into H / K = G / P and the polysphere contains the polydisk (SU(1,1)/T)r. The polysphere and polydisk are the direct product of r copies of the Riemann

Holomorphic function

logarithmically convex Reinhardt domains, the simplest example of which is a polydisk. However, they also come with some fundamental restrictions. Unlike functions

Hartogs's extension theorem

\ \ {\text{or}}\ \ 1-\varepsilon <|z_{2}|\}} in the two-dimensional polydisk Δ 2 = { z ∈ C 2 ; | z 1 | < 1 , | z 2 | < 1 } {\displaystyle \Delta ^{2}=\{z\in

Poincaré lemma

lemma, since the proof of the Dolbeault–Grothendieck lemma holds on a polydisk (a product of disks in the complex plane, on which the multidimensional

Larry Guth

MR 2491695, S2CID 10402235. Guth, Larry (2008), "Symplectic embeddings of polydisks", Inventiones Mathematicae, 172 (3): 477–489, arXiv:0709.1957, Bibcode:2008InMat

Riemann mapping theorem

{\displaystyle \mathbb {C} ^{n}} ( n ≥ 2 {\displaystyle n\geq 2} ), the ball and polydisk are both simply connected, but there is no biholomorphic map between them

Mischa Cotlar

"Nehari and Nevanlinna-Pick Problems and Holomorphic Extensions in the Polydisk in Terms of Restricted BMO". Journal of Functional Analysis. 124: 205–210

Function of several complex variables

cohomology. In polydisks, the Cauchy's integral formula holds and the power series expansion of holomorphic functions is defined, because polydisks was possible