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We turn next to a question about functions of a complex variable that is related to the Inverse Function Theorem.That result asserts, subject to a couple of hypotheses, that the inverse of a one-to-one differentiable function of a real variable is also differentiable.Since a function is only differentiable at points in the interior of its domain, it is necessary to verify that the point f ( c ) is in the interior of the domain f ( S ) of the inverse function f - 1 before the question of differentiability at that point can be addressed. And, the peculiar thing is that it is this point about f ( c ) being in the interior of f ( S ) that is the subtle part. The fact that the inverse function is differentiable there, andhas the prescribed form, is then only a careful ϵ - δ argument. For continuous real-valued functions of real variables, the fact that f ( c ) belongs to the interior of f ( S ) boils down to the fact that intervals get mapped onto intervals by continuous functions,which is basically a consequence of the Intermediate Value Theorem. However, for complex-valued functions of complex variables, thesituation is much deeper. For instance, the continuous image of a disk is just not always another disk, and it may not even be an open set.Well, all is not lost; we just have to work a little harder.

We turn next to a question about functions of a complex variable that is related to [link] , the Inverse Function Theorem.That result asserts, subject to a couple of hypotheses, that the inverse of a one-to-one differentiable function of a real variable is also differentiable.Since a function is only differentiable at points in the interior of its domain, it is necessary to verify that the point f ( c ) is in the interior of the domain f ( S ) of the inverse function f - 1 before the question of differentiability at that point can be addressed. And, the peculiar thing is that it is this point about f ( c ) being in the interior of f ( S ) that is the subtle part. The fact that the inverse function is differentiable there, andhas the prescribed form, is then only a careful ϵ - δ argument. For continuous real-valued functions of real variables, the fact that f ( c ) belongs to the interior of f ( S ) boils down to the fact that intervals get mapped onto intervals by continuous functions,which is basically a consequence of the Intermediate Value Theorem. However, for complex-valued functions of complex variables, thesituation is much deeper. For instance, the continuous image of a disk is just not always another disk, and it may not even be an open set.Well, all is not lost; we just have to work a little harder.

Open mapping theorem

Let S be a piecewise smooth geometric set, and write U for the (open) interior S 0 of S . Suppose f is a nonconstant differentiable, complex-valued function on the set U . Then the range f ( U ) of f is an open subset of C .

Let c be in U . Because f is not a constant function, there must exist an r > 0 such that f ( c ) f ( z ) for all z on the boundary C r of the disk B r ( c ) . See part (b) of [link] . Let z 0 be a point in the compact set C r at which the continuous real-valued function | f ( z ) - f ( c ) | attains its minimum value s . Since f ( z ) f ( c ) for any z C r , we must have that s > 0 . We claim that the disk B s / 2 ( f ( c ) ) belongs to the range f ( U ) of f . This will show that the point f ( c ) belongs to the ihnterior of the set f ( U ) , and that will finish the proof.

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Source:  OpenStax, Analysis of functions of a single variable. OpenStax CNX. Dec 11, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11249/1.1
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