The term resurgent function (from Latin: resurgere, to get up again) comes from French mathematician Jean Écalle's theory of resurgent functions and alien calculus. The theory evolved from the summability of divergent series (see Borel summation) and treats analytic functions with isolated singularities. He introduced the term in the late 1970s.[1]

Resurgent functions have applications in asymptotic analysis, in the theory of differential equations, in perturbation theory and in quantum field theory.

For analytic functions with isolated singularities, the Alien calculus can be derived, a special algebra for their derivatives.

Definition

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A  -resurgent function is an element of  , i.e. an element of the form   from  , where   and   is a  -continuable germ.[2]

A power series   whose formal Borel transformation is a  -resurgent function is called  -resurgent series.

Basic concepts and notation

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Convergence in  :

The formal power series   is convergent in   if the associated formal power series   has a positive radius of convergence.   denotes the space of formal power series convergent in  .[2]

Formal Borel transform:

The formal Borel transform (named after Émile Borel) is the operator   defined by

 .[2]

Convolution in  :

Let  , then the convolution is given by

 .

By adjunction we can add a unit to the convolution in   and introduce the vector space  , where we denote the   element with  . Using the convention   we can write the space as   and define

 

and set  .[2]

 -resummable seed:

Let   be a non-empty discrete subset of   and define  .

Let   be the radius of convergence of  .   is a  -continuable seed if an   exists such that   and  , and   analytic continuation along some path in   starting at a point in  .

  denotes the space of  -continuable germs in  .[2]

Bibliography

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  • Les Fonctions Résurgentes, Jean Écalle, vols. 1–3, pub. Math. Orsay, 1981-1985
  • Divergent Series, Summability and Resurgence I, Claude Mitschi and David Sauzin, Springer Verlag
  • "Guided tour through resurgence theory", Jean Écalle

References

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  1. ^ Wood, Charlie (6 April 2023). "How to Tame the Endless Infinities Hiding in the Heart of Particle Physics". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
  2. ^ a b c d e Claude Mitschi, David Sauzin (2016). Divergent Series, Summability and Resurgence I (1 ed.). Switzerland: Springer Verlag. ISBN 9783319287355.