Continuous boundary values In one dimension, a simple case of the edge-of-the-wedge theorem can be stated as follows. • Suppose that
f is a continuous complex-valued function on the
complex plane that is
holomorphic on the
upper half-plane, and on the
lower half-plane. Then it is holomorphic everywhere. In this example, the two wedges are the upper half-plane and the lower half plane, and their common edge is the
real axis. This result can be proved from
Morera's theorem. Indeed, a function is holomorphic provided its integral round any contour vanishes; a contour which crosses the real axis can be broken up into contours in the upper and lower half-planes and the integral round these vanishes by hypothesis.
Distributional boundary values on a circle The more general case is phrased in terms of distributions. This is technically simplest in the case where the common boundary is the unit circle |z|=1 in the complex plane. In that case holomorphic functions
f,
g in the regions r and 1 have Laurent expansions : f(z)= \sum_{-\infty}^\infty a_n z^n,\,\,\,\, g(z)=\sum_{-\infty}^\infty b_n z^n absolutely convergent in the same regions and have distributional boundary values given by the formal Fourier series : f(\theta)= \sum_{-\infty}^\infty a_n e^{in\theta},\,\,\,\, g(\theta)= \sum_{-\infty}^\infty b_n e^{in\theta}. Their distributional boundary values are equal if a_n=b_n for all
n. It is then elementary that the common
Laurent series converges absolutely in the whole region r.
Distributional boundary values on an interval In general given an open interval I=(a,b) on the real axis and holomorphic functions f_+,\,\,\ f_- defined in (a,b) \times (0,R) and (a,b)\times (-R,0) satisfying : |f_\pm(x +iy)| for some non-negative integer
N, the boundary values T_\pm of f_\pm can be defined as distributions on the real axis by the formulas Using the
Cayley transform between the circle and the real line, this argument can be rephrased in a standard way in terms of
Fourier series and
Sobolev spaces on the circle. Indeed, let f and g be holomorphic functions defined exterior and interior to some arc on the
unit circle such that locally they have radial limits in some Sobolev space, Then, letting : D= z{\partial\over \partial z}, the equations :D^k F=f,\,\,\, D^k G =g can be solved locally in such a way that the radial limits of
G and
F tend locally to the same function in a higher Sobolev space. For
k large enough, this convergence is uniform by the
Sobolev embedding theorem. By the argument for continuous functions,
F and
G therefore patch to give a holomorphic function near the arc and hence so do
f and
g. == General case ==