Cauchy’s estimate bounds the derivatives of an analytic function in terms of a bound on the function itself.
If is analytic on a domain containing the closed disk , and on the circle , then for every nonnegative integer ,
Proof
Apply the ML estimate to the generalized Cauchy integral formula with = circle of radius around . The contour has length , and the integrand magnitude is bounded by . So
What it says
A function that doesn’t grow too fast can’t have wildly large derivatives. Larger (bigger circle where is bounded by ) means smaller bound on derivatives. Smaller means tighter neighborhood for the bound, but a larger numerical bound on each derivative.
Consequences
Liouville’s theorem is one line from Cauchy’s estimate. If is entire and everywhere, then for any and any , the estimate with gives . Letting : . Since was arbitrary, , so is constant. See Liouville’s theorem.
Taylor series convergence radius. Cauchy’s estimate is used in the proof that the Taylor series of an analytic function around converges on the largest open disk around where is analytic — the radius is exactly the distance to the nearest singularity. See Taylor series.
In context
Cauchy’s estimate is the bridge between:
- the integral representation of derivatives (generalized CIF),
- magnitude bounds on integrals (ML estimate).
It distills “analyticity controls everything” into a precise inequality. The proof is two lines, the consequences fill the rest of complex analysis.