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On the one hand, this monograph serves as a self-contained introduction to Nevanlinna's theory of value distribution because the authors only assume the reader is familiar with the basics of complex analysis. On the other hand, the monograph also serves as a valuable reference for the research specialist because the authors present, for the first time in book form, the most modern and refined versions of the Second Main Theorem with precise error terms, in both the geometric and logarithmic derivative based approaches. A unique feature of the monograph is its "number-theoretic digressions". These special sections assume no background in number theory and explore the exciting interconnections between Nevanlinna theory and the theory of Diophantine approximation.
On the one hand, this monograph serves as a self-contained
introduction to Nevanlinna's theory of value distribution because
the authors only assume the reader is familiar with the basics of
complex analysis. On the other hand, the monograph also serves as a
valuable reference for the research specialist because the authors
present, for the first time in book form, the most modern and
refined versions of the Second Main Theorem with precise error
terms, in both the geometric and logarithmic derivative based
approaches. A unique feature of the monograph is its
"number-theoretic digressions." These special sections assume no
background in number theory and explore the exciting
interconnections between Nevanlinna theory and the theory of
Diophantine approximation.
These are notes of lectures on Nevanlinna theory, in the classical
case of meromorphic functions, and the generalization by
Carlson-Griffith to equidimensional holomorphic maps using as
domain space finite coverings of C resp. Cn. Conjecturally best
possible error terms are obtained following a method of Ahlfors and
Wong. This is especially significant when obtaining uniformity for
the error term w.r.t. coverings, since the analytic yields case a
strong version of Vojta's conjectures in the number-theoretic case
involving the theory of heights. The counting function for the
ramified locus in the analytic case is the analogue of the
normalized logarithmetic discriminant in the number-theoretic case,
and is seen to occur with the expected coefficient 1. The error
terms are given involving an approximating function (type function)
similar to the probabilistic type function of Khitchine in number
theory. The leisurely exposition allows readers with no background
in Nevanlinna Theory to approach some of the basic remaining
problems around the error term. It may be used as a continuation of
a graduate course in complex analysis, also leading into complex
differential geometry.
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