Open Journal of Mathematical Analysis
ISSN: 2616-8111 (Online) 2616-8103 (Print)
DOI: 10.30538/psrp-oma2021.0092
On a generalized class of bi-univalent functions defined by subordination and \(q\)-derivative operator
Department of Mathematics, University of Ilorin, PMB 1515, Ilorin, Nigeria.; (A.O.L & T.O.O)
\(^{1}\)Corresponding Author: lasode_ayo@yahoo.com
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
Let \(\mathcal{U}=\{z:z\in\mathbb{C}, |z|< 1\}\) be a unit disk and let \(\mathcal{A}\) denote the class of analytic functions of the form
Let \(\mathcal{W}\) denote the class of functions
\begin{equation*}\label{funSchwarz} w(z)=w_1z + w_2z^2 + w_3z^3+\cdots\quad (z\in\mathcal{U}), \end{equation*} such that \(w(0)=0\) and \(|w(z)|< 1\). The class \(\mathcal{W}\) is known as the class of Schwarz functions.By [1], let \(j(z)\), \(J(z)\in\mathcal{A}\), then \(j(z)\prec J(z)\), \(z\in\mathcal{U}\), if \(\exists w(z)\) analytic in \(\mathcal{U}\), such that \(w(0)=0\), \(|w(z)|< 1\) and \(j(z)=J(w(z))\). If the function \(J(z)\) is univalent in \(\mathcal{U}\), then \(j(z)\prec J(z)\implies j(0) = J(0)\) and \(j(\mathcal{U})\subset J(\mathcal{U})\).
Let \(\mathcal{P}\) denote the class of functions
Historically, Lewin [6] introduced a subclass of \(\mathcal{A}\) called the class of bi-univalent functions and established that \(|a_2|\leq 1.51\) for all bi-univalent functions. Also, the Koebe 1/4 theorem (see [1]) states that the range of every function \(f\in\mathcal{S}\) contains the disk \(D=\{\omega:|\omega|< 0.25\}\subseteq f(\mathcal{U})\). This implies that \(\forall f\in\mathcal{S}\) has an inverse function \(f^{-1}\) such that
\begin{align*} f^{-1}(f(z)) &= z \quad (z\in\mathcal{U}), \end{align*} and \begin{align*} f(f^{-1}(\omega)) &= \omega\quad (\omega:|\omega| < r_0(f);\; r_0(f)\geq 0.25), \end{align*} where \(f^{-1}(\omega)\) is expressed asSome functions \(f\in\mathcal{B}\) includes \(f(z)=z\), \(f(z)=z/(1-z)\), \(f(z)=-\log(1-z)\) and \(f(z)=\frac{1}{2}\log[(1+z)/(1-z)]\). Observe that some familiar functions \(f\in\mathcal{S}\) such as the Koebe function \(K(z)=z/(1-z)^2\), its rotation function \(K_\sigma(z)=z/(1-e^{i\sigma}z)^2\), \(f(z)=z - z^2/2\) and \(f(z)=z/(1-z^2)\) are nonmembers of \(\mathcal{B}\). See [4,5,7,8,9,10,11] for more details.
Jackson [12] (see also [8,13,14]) introduced the concept of \(q\)-derivative operator. For functions \(f\in\mathcal{A}\), the \(q\)-derivative of \(f\) can be defined by
For instance, if \(\alpha\) is a constant, then for the function \(f(z)=\alpha z^n\),
\[\mathcal{D}_qf(z)=\mathcal{D}_q(\alpha z^n)=\frac{1-q^n}{1-q}\alpha z^{n-1}=[n]_q\alpha z^{n-1}\,,\] and note that \[\lim\limits_{q\uparrow 1}\mathcal{D}_qf(z)=\lim\limits_{q\uparrow 1}[n]_q\alpha z^{n-1}=n\alpha z^{n-1}=:f'(z)\,,\] where \(f'(z)\) is the classical derivative.In this study, the \(q\)-derivative operator and the subordination principle are used to define and generalize a subclass of bi-univalent functions. Afterwards, some coefficient bounds and some Fekete-Szegö estimates were investigated. Some of our results generalised that of Srivastava and Bansal in [10] and some new results are added.
Definition 1. Let \(0< q< 1\), \(\tau \in\mathbb{C}\setminus\{0\}\), \(0\leq \lambda\leq 1\) and \(\phi\) is defined in (4). A function \(f\in\mathcal{B}\) is said to be in the class \(\mathcal{B}_q(\tau,\lambda,\phi)\) if the subordination conditions
Remark 1. Let \(q\uparrow 1\) in (8) and (9), then \(\mathcal{B}_q(\tau,\lambda,\phi)\) becomes the class \(\mathcal{B}(\tau, \lambda, \phi)\) investigated by Srivastava and Bansal [10].
2. Preliminary Lemmas
To establish our results, we shall need the following lemmas. Let \(p(z)\) be as defined in (2).Lemma 2 ([1]). If \(p(z)\in\mathcal{P}\), then \(|p_n|\leq 2\ (n\in\mathbb{N}). \) The result is sharp for the well-known Möbius function.
Lemma 3 ([15,16]). If \(p(z)\in\mathcal{P}\), then \(2p_2 = p^2_1 + (4-p^2_1)x \) for some \(x\) and \(|x|\leq 1\).
3. Main Results
Unless otherwise mentioned in what follows, we assume throughout this work that \(0< q< 1\), \(\tau\in\mathbb{C}\setminus\{0\}\), \(0\leq \lambda \leq 1\), \(\phi\) is as defined in (4) and \(f\in\mathcal{B}\), hence our results are as follows:Theorem 4. Let \(f\in\mathcal{B}_q(\tau,\lambda,\phi)\), then
Proof. Let \(f(z)\in\mathcal{B}\) and \(F(\omega)=f^{-1}(\omega)\), then there exists the analytic functions \(u(z), v(\omega)\in\mathcal{W}\), \(z,\omega\in\mathcal{U}\) such that \(u(0)=0=v(0)\), \(|u(z)|< 1\), \(|v(\omega)|< 1\) so that they satisfy the subordination conditions:
Again by subtracting (23) from (25), using (26) and simplifying we get
Corollary 5. Let \(f(z)\in\mathcal{B}_q(\tau, \lambda, \phi)\), then as \(q\uparrow 1\), \begin{align*} |a_2| &\leq \frac{|\tau|\beta_1^{3/2}} {\sqrt{|\tau[3]_q \beta_1^2 +[2]_q^2 (\beta_1-\beta_2)|}}\,,\\ |a_3| &\leq \frac{|\tau|^2 \beta_1^2}{[2]^2_q} + \frac{ |\tau| \beta_1}{[3]_q}\,. \end{align*} which is the result of Srivastava and Bansal [10].
Theorem 6.( Fekete-Szegö Estimate, \(\varrho\in\mathbb{R}\)). If \(f\in\mathcal{B}_q(\tau,\lambda,\phi)\) and \(\varrho\in\mathbb{R}\), then \[ \mbox{\(|a_3 - \varrho a_2^2|\)}\leq \left\{ \begin{array}{rl} \frac{|\tau|\beta_1}{[3]_q(1+[2]_q\lambda)} & \mbox{for \(0\leq |h(\varrho)|\leq\frac{1}{[3]_q(1+[2]_q\lambda)}\);}\\ |\tau|\beta_1|h(\rho)| & \mbox{for \(|h(\varrho)|\geq \frac{1}{[3]_q(1+[2]_q\lambda)}\),} \end{array}\right. \] where
Proof. From (30) and (31), \begin{align*} |a_3 - \varrho a_2^2| &= \left|\frac{\tau \beta_1 (b_2 - c_2)}{4[3]_q(1+[2]_q\lambda)} + (1 - \varrho)a^2_2\right|\\ &= \left|\frac{\tau \beta_1}{4}\left\{\frac{(b_2 - c_2)}{[3]_q(1+[2]_q\lambda)} + (b_2+c_2)h(\varrho)\right\}\right|\,, \end{align*} where \(h(\varrho) \) is given in (33), so that by applying triangle inequality, (4), Lemma 2 and simplifying complete the proof.
Theorem 7( Fekete-Szegö Estimate, \(\rho\in\mathbb{C}\)). If \(f\in\mathcal{B}_q(\tau, \lambda, \phi)\) and \(\rho\in\mathbb{C}\), then
Proof. From (27) and (31) and using (26),
4. Conclusion
In this work, we were able to establish the first two coefficient bounds and also solve the Fekete-Szegö problem for the class \(\mathcal{B}_q(\tau,\lambda,\phi)\) of analytic and bi-univalent functions in \(\mathcal{U}\). The results in the first theorem generalized that of Srivastava and Bansal [10].Acknowledgments
The authors thank the referees for their valuable suggestions to improve the paper.Author Contributions
All authors contributed equally to the writing of this paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.References
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