Transformations of Germs of Differentiable Functions through Changes of Local Coordinates
Author(s) -
Masahiro Shiota
Publication year - 1973
Publication title -
publications of the research institute for mathematical sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.786
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1663-4926
pISSN - 0034-5318
DOI - 10.2977/prims/1195192741
Subject(s) - differentiable function , mathematics , germ , transcendental function , function (biology) , pure mathematics , analytic function , polynomial , singularity , variable (mathematics) , combinatorics , mathematical analysis , evolutionary biology , biology
We generalize the results in N. Levinson p], £4] and J. Cl. Tougeron Q8] which show that some germs of differentiate (or analytic) functions are transformed through changes of coordinates into polynomials in one (or two) variable with coefficients which are germs in the other variables (§3). H. Whitney [9] has shown that x y( y— x)( y— (3 + *)#)( J-r(0*) (where Y is a transcendental function and f(0) = 4) cannot be transformed into any polynomial through analytic changes of coordinates (locally at the origin), and we prove this function cannot be transformed even through differentiable changes of coordinates (§4). In view of Thorn's Principle, that is, for a germ of an analytic function f having 0 as a topologically isolated singularity, the variety /~(0) determines the function f, we study particularly whether a germ f$ (such that 0(0) >0) can be transformed into / (§5). As a corollary of the sequence we obtain a sufficient condition for a germ of a differentiable function in two variables to be transformed into a germ of an analytic function (§6). In Appendix we show canonical forms of germs which have un point de naissance or un point critique du type queue d'aronde which is due to Cerf [2]. The method of proofs is to use almost all theorems in Malgrange The author thanks Professor Adachi for his criticism.
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