The Sokhotski–Plemelj theorem (Polish spelling is Sochocki) is a theorem in complex analysis, which helps in evaluating certain integrals. The real-line version of it (see below) is often used in physics, although rarely referred to by name. The theorem is named after Julian Sochocki, who proved it in 1868, and Josip Plemelj, who rediscovered it as a main ingredient of his solution of the Riemann–Hilbert problem in 1908.
cannot be evaluated for any z on the curve C. However, on the interior and exterior of the curve, the integral produces analytic functions, which will be denoted inside C and outside. The Sokhotski–Plemelj formulas relate the limiting boundary values of these two analytic functions at a point z on C and the Cauchy principal value of the integral:
Subsequent generalizations relax the smoothness requirements on curve C and the function φ.
These formulae should be interpreted as integral equalities, as follows: Let f be a complex-valued function which is defined and continuous on the real line, and let a and b be real constants with . Then
and
Note that this version makes no use of analyticity.
For the second term, the factor x2⁄(x2 + ε2) approaches 1 for |x| ≫ ε, approaches 0 for |x| ≪ ε, and is exactly symmetric about 0. Therefore, in the limit, it turns the integral into a Cauchy principal value integral.
where E is some energy and t is time. This expression, as written, is undefined (since the time integral does not converge), so it is typically modified by adding a negative real term to -iEt in the exponential, and then taking that to zero, i.e.:
where the latter step uses the real version of the theorem.
Gakhov, F. D. (1990), Boundary value problems. Reprint of the 1966 translation, Dover Publications, ISBN0-486-66275-6
Muskhelishvili, N. I. (1949). Singular integral equations, boundary problems of function theory and their application to mathematical physics. Melbourne: Dept. of Supply and Development, Aeronautical Research Laboratories.
Blanchard, Bruening: Mathematical Methods in Physics (Birkhauser 2003), Example 3.3.1 4
Sokhotskii, Y. W. (1873). On definite integrals and functions used in series expansions. St. Petersburg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)