Holomorphic separability

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In mathematics in complex analysis, the concept of holomorphic separability is a measure of the richness of the set of holomorphic functions on a complex manifold or complex-analytic space.

Formal definition

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A complex manifold or complex space X is said to be holomorphically separable, if whenever xy are two points in X, there exists a holomorphic function f𝒪(X), such that f(x) ≠ f(y).[1]

Often one says the holomorphic functions separate points.

Usage and examples

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  • All complex manifolds that can be mapped injectively into some n are holomorphically separable, in particular, all domains in n and all Stein manifolds.
  • A holomorphically separable complex manifold is not compact unless it is discrete and finite.
  • The condition is part of the definition of a Stein manifold.

References

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