Analysis Seminar
Speaker: Blake J. Boudreaux (Western)
"Rational Convexity of Totally Real Sets"
Time: 14:30
Room: MC 107
A compact set $X\subset\mathbb C^n$ is said to be rationally convex if for every point $z\not\in X$ there is a polynomial $P$, depending on $z$, so that $P(z)=0$ but $P^{-1}(0)\cap X=\varnothing$. In view of the Oka-Weil theorem, any function holomorphic on a rationally convex compact $X$ can be approximated uniformly on $X$ by rational functions with poles off $X$. A totally real manifold $M$ is one whose tangent space has no complex structure, i.e., $J(T_pM)\cap T_pM=\{0\}$ for all $p\in M$.
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By a classical result of Duval-Sibony, a totally real manifold $M$ in $\mathbb{C}^n$ is rationally convex if and only if there exists a Kähler form $dd^c\varphi$ for which $M$ is isotropic. Under a mild technical assumption, we generalize this necessary and sufficient condition to the setting of totally real sets (zero loci of strictly plurisubharmonic functions).