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Schwarz–Ahlfors–Pick theorem

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In mathematics, the Schwarz–Ahlfors–Pick theorem is an extension of the Schwarz lemma for hyperbolic geometry, such as the Poincaré half-plane model.

The Schwarz–Pick lemma states that every holomorphic function from the unit disk U to itself, or from the upper half-plane H to itself, will not increase the Poincaré distance between points. The unit disk U with the Poincaré metric has negative Gaussian curvature −1. In 1938, Lars Ahlfors generalised the lemma to maps from the unit disk to other negatively curved surfaces:

Theorem (Schwarz–Ahlfors–Pick). Let U be the unit disk with Poincaré metric ρ ; let S be a Riemann surface endowed with a Hermitian metric σ whose Gaussian curvature is ≤ −1; let f : U S be a holomorphic function. Then

σ ( f ( z 1 ) , f ( z 2 ) ) ρ ( z 1 , z 2 )

for all z 1 , z 2 U .

A generalization of this theorem was proved by Shing-Tung Yau in 1973.

References

Schwarz–Ahlfors–Pick theorem Wikipedia