A
function of a complex variable is
holomorphic in an
open domain if it is
differentiable with respect to at every point of . Equivalently, it is holomorphic if it is
analytic, that is, if its
Taylor series exists at every point of , and converges to the function in some
neighbourhood of the point. A function is
meromorphic in if every point of has a neighbourhood such that at least one of and is holomorphic in it. A
zero of a meromorphic function is a complex number such that . A
pole of is a zero of . If is a function that is meromorphic in a neighbourhood of a point z_0 of the
complex plane, then there exists an integer such that :(z-z_0)^n f(z) is holomorphic and nonzero in a neighbourhood of z_0 (this is a consequence of the analytic property). If , then z_0 is a
pole of
order (or multiplicity) of . If , then z_0 is a zero of order |n| of .
Simple zero and
simple pole are terms used for zeroes and poles of order |n|=1.
Degree is sometimes used synonymously to order. This characterization of zeros and poles implies that zeros and poles are
isolated, that is, every zero or pole has a neighbourhood that does not contain any other zero and pole. Because of the
order of zeros and poles being defined as a non-negative number and the symmetry between them, it is often useful to consider a pole of order as a zero of order and a zero of order as a pole of order . In this case a point that is neither a pole nor a zero is viewed as a pole (or zero) of order 0. A meromorphic function may have infinitely many zeros and poles. This is the case for the
gamma function (see the image in the infobox), which is meromorphic in the whole complex plane, and has a simple pole at every non-positive integer. The
Riemann zeta function is also meromorphic in the whole complex plane, with a single pole of order 1 at . Its zeros in the left halfplane are all the negative even integers, and the
Riemann hypothesis is the conjecture that all other zeros are along . In a neighbourhood of a point z_0, a nonzero meromorphic function is the sum of a
Laurent series with at most finite
principal part (the terms with negative index values): :f(z) = \sum_{k\geq -n} a_k (z - z_0)^k, where is an integer, and a_{-n}\neq 0. Again, if (the sum starts with a_{-|n|} (z - z_0)^{-|n|}, the principal part has terms), one has a pole of order , and if (the sum starts with a_ (z - z_0)^, there is no principal part), one has a zero of order |n|. ==At infinity==