1. Introduction
Consider a domain
with a smooth boundary
. As the boundary point is a strongly pseudoconvex point
, we can find a local system of holomorphic coordinates. Hakim [
1] and Pflug [
2] show that every strongly pseudoconvex point of
is a peak point. But, this property fails for weakly pseudoconvex boundary points in general. Kohn and Nirenberg have an example that is defined with the boundary point
. The representative example [
3] is
, which is a pseudoconvex domain with a point in the boundary that does not admit any peak function; the supporting surface and the boundary cannot be convexifiable by any local holomorphic coordinates [
4,
5,
6]. The existence of supporting functions and smooth peak functions and the properties of convexifiability have been established by Pflug [
2], Kola
ř [
7], J. Han [
8], D. Zhao [
9], and J. Byun and H. R. Cho [
10]. In [
11,
12], Taeyong Ahn et al. provide a tool to construct global holomorphic peaks from local holomorphic supporting functions for a class of unbounded domains in
. But, it is still an open question whether any Kohn–Nirenberg domain is biholomorphic to a bounded domain. In order to better understand the properties of the Kohn–Nirenberg domain, in [
13], Simone Calamai provide some new examples of Kohn–Nirenberg domains that develop some properties and theories about convexifiability in
.
Let
denote the space of functions holomorphic on
and of class
on
. Recall a point
is a peak point to
if there is a function
satisfying
and
for all
. We call
f a peak function. A holomorphic supporting surface for
at
is a complex manifold
M of co-dimension 1 with the property that there exists a neighborhood
of
such that
. In [
9], D. Zhao et al. consider a general modification of the Kohn–Nirenberg domain near the origin in
, namely the domain
, where
and
. They proved the following sufficient condition.
Theorem 1 ([
9])
. Given the above domain with , then- (1)
is a pseudoconvex domain.
- (2)
If or but , there exists a -peak function and a supporting surface at the origin .
- (3)
If and , there does not exist any -peak function and supporting surface at .
In fact, the above general Kohn–Nirenberg domain
is a special case of a decoupled domain in
[
14]. Based on the modification of the domain
, we define a general Kohn–Nirenberg-type domain as follows:
where
, and
.
If we do not consider the term
, the general modified domain
is a weighted–bumped domain [
12], denoted by
(use the notation of Definition 2). If we consider this term, Theorem 4.6 [
11] has an argument that there exists a global holomorphic supporting function when
and a bound point of
admits a local holomorphic supporting function. Thus,
keeps the main features. It will be interesting to study whether the existence of supporting surface and peak functions at the origin in [
9] can be generalized to the domain
.
For the domain , we study the existence of the holomorphic peak function, supporting the surface at the boundary points. The main result of this article is the following theorem.
Theorem 2. Let be the above domain with ; we have
- (a)
is a peseudoconvex domain.
- (b)
If or and , there exists a holomorphic peak function and supporting surface at the origin .
- (c)
If and , there does not exist any supporting surface at .
Here,
means that
q divides
p;
means that
q does not divide
p. We shall use these notations in this article. The structure of this article is as follows. In
Section 2, we provide some basic definitions for the Kohn–Nirenberg domain. In
Section 3, we provide the proof of Theorem 2 regarding (1)–(3).
2. Basic Definitions and Lemmas
Let be a domain in with smooth boundary; its defining function is . Let be the space of holomorphic functions on and -continuous on .
Definition 1. For a point and a vector , we write . The Levi form of at ξ applied to is . ξ is called a pseudoconvex point iffor all , where is the corresponding complex tangent space. If the Levi form is positive at boundary point ξ, i.e., , we call ξ a strong pseudoconvex point.
If all the boundary points are (strong) pseudoconvex points, the domain Ω is called a (strong) pseudoconvex domain.
Definition 2 ([
12])
. For domain , if , where(a) is a real-valued weighted polynomial on .
(b) All the boundary points of are pseudoconvex points and all but the origin are strong pseudoconvex points.
Lemma 1 ([
9])
. For any real number K with , there exist constants and such thatwhere and depend only on m. Lemma 2. If , there exist constants and such that Proof. If
, then
. From Lemma 1 and
, we have constants
and
such that
where
and
depend only on
m.
Set the domain
; its defining function
on
is as follows
where
, and
. □
Lemma 3. If , then is a pseudoconvex domain.
Proof. For boundary point
and tangent vector
, we compute the Levi form and obtain
where
.
and
.
For
, there is
If
and
, we have the Levi form
Thus, the Levi form is semi-positive definite, which proves that is pseudoconvex. □
3. Holomorphic Peak Function and Supporting Surface of the General Modified Domain
Here, we prove the main Theorem 2 regarding (1)–(3).
Proof of Theorem 2 regarding (1). Let
. Suppose , and then . So, Lemma 3 implies that is pseudoconvex. □
Remark 1. Let be the above domain. If , it is easy to see the origin is a weakly pseudoconvex (not strong pseudoconvex) boundary point of .
Proof of Theorem 2 regarding (2). Let be the above domain with .
For , we consider two cases.
- (I)
The case . Let and . In polar coordinate system, we have . Then, we consider the coordinate transformation
, and
. In the new coordinate system, after dropping the stars, we have
Note that
. Lemma 2 implies that there exists
such that
The point 0 belongs to the set
, where
is a neighborhood of 0. For all
, there exists
j such that
. We have
This is a contradiction with the definition
and implies that
Thus, in the new coordinates, the complex manifold is a holomorphic supporting surface at the origin . The holomorphic supporting function is at 0, and the corresponding holomorphic peak function is for the origin 0.
In fact, it is obvious that
. Put
. For
, we have
;
i.e.,If , then and .
If , then .
So, the function
is a local peak function at
. Further, Hakim and Sibony [
1,
2] show that there is a global peak function with the same regularity as
.
- (II)
The case
and
. There exists holomorphic peak function and supporting surface at the origin. Note that
; similar to case (I), we have the complex manifold
, which is also a holomorphic supporting surface at the origin. At the same time,
is a local peak function at
. In [
1,
2], Hakim and Sibony show that there is a global peak function with the same regularity as
h.
□
Proof of Theorem 2 regarding (3). Assume that there exists supporting surface at the origin . The support surface M as a complex manifold of co-dimension 1 implies that there are an open neighborhood and holomorphic function f on such that
- (1)
;
- (2)
.
We shall study two different cases.
- (I)
The case
, there is some
j such that
. The implicit function theorem implies that
Now, let
, and then
If is small, then in every small neighborhood of 0. Therefore, we have a contradiction with M as a support surface.
- (II)
The case
, the implicit function theorem implies that
We shall divide this into three different cases.
- (a)
When , is the sum of those terms in the power series for which .
We let
, where
is defined by
Moreover,
. If
is sufficiently small,
Hence, M is not a supporting surface. It is a contradiction.
- (b)
When , . We can suppose and choose such that .
Let
; it is easy to see that
Then,
if
is sufficiently small. Hence,
M is not a supporting surface. It is a contradiction.
- (c)
Then, the only remaining case is when
Let
, where
is defined by
and
. Then,
where
. We take
, and then
Since
l takes odd integers, we obtain
If
, we have
. Therefore, when
is small,
Since and , it follows that for all l.
Hence, we obtain a contradiction. This completes the proof.
□
There are still some problems yet to be answered for the domain .
Problem 1. When and , the peak functions of the at the origin are still not clear.
Moreover, the behavior of invariant metrics (e.g., Kobayashi and Carathéodory) on the Kohn–Nirenberg domain could be studied using the techniques in [
11]. Such metrics are central to understanding hyperbolic geometry in complex domains, and their properties here might reveal new phenomena in extremal map constructions or boundary asymptotics. Thus, another nature problem is as follows.
Problem 2. The Bergman metric and Carathéodory metrics of in the statement of Theorem 2 are positive and complete.