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In complex analysis, a branch point may be thought of informally as a point z0 at which a " multiple-valued function" changes values when one winds once around z0.

Examples:

A holomorphic function f(z) has a branch point wherever its derivative f ′(z) has a simple pole (i.e., a pole of multiplicity 1) -- see mathematical singularity.

In order to work with honest, single-valued functions, it is customary to construct branch cuts in the complex plane, namely arcs out of branch points in the complement of which there is a well-defined branch of the function in question. An example for

is to make a branch cut along the interval [0,1] on the real axis, connecting the two branch points of the function. The same idea can be applied to the function √z; but in that case one has to perceive that the point at infinity is the appropriate 'other' branch point to connect to from 0, for example along the whole negative real axis. See also principal branch.

The branch cut device may appear arbitrary (since it is); it is very useful, for example in the theory of special functions. An invariant explanation of the branch phenomenon is developed in Riemann surface theory (of which it is historically the origin), and more generally in the ramification and monodromy theory of algebraic functions and differential equations.

Complex analysis



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