A cusp form is distinguished in the case of modular forms for the
modular group by the vanishing of the constant coefficient
a0 in the
Fourier series expansion (see
q-expansion) :\sum a_n q^n. This Fourier expansion exists as a consequence of the presence in the modular group's action on the
upper half-plane via the transformation :z\mapsto z+1. For other groups, there may be some translation through several units, in which case the Fourier expansion is in terms of a different parameter. In all cases, though, the limit as
q → 0 is the limit in the upper half-plane as the
imaginary part of
z → ∞. Taking the quotient by the modular group, this limit corresponds to a
cusp of a
modular curve (in the sense of a point added for
compactification). So, the definition amounts to saying that a cusp form is a modular form that vanishes at a cusp. In the case of other groups, there may be several cusps, and the definition becomes a modular form vanishing at
all cusps. This may involve several expansions. ==Dimension==