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arxiv: 2605.22688 · v1 · pith:5VV2VITLnew · submitted 2026-05-21 · 🧮 math.CV

Subordination Associated with Laguerre polynomial

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 03:39 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CV
keywords Laguerre polynomialexponential subordinationJanowski starlikeJanowski convexunivalent functionsstarlikenessconvexitysubordination
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The pith

The Laguerre polynomial satisfies exponential subordination and belongs to the Janowski starlike and convex classes under suitable parameter conditions.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper takes the Laguerre polynomial, already known from prior work to be convex and strongly starlike under certain conditions, and derives new results on its subordination behavior. Specifically, it establishes that the polynomial is exponentially subordinate and that it meets the criteria for Janowski starlikeness and Janowski convexity when the parameters satisfy derived inequalities. These properties describe how the polynomial maps the unit disk in the complex plane and classify its geometric character among analytic functions. A reader would care because such results give explicit, computable examples of functions with controlled distortion and growth, useful for both theoretical classification and applications in physics where Laguerre polynomials arise.

Core claim

The Laguerre polynomial satisfies exponential subordination. It is also Janowski starlike and Janowski convex when the parameters obey the conditions obtained by applying the relevant analytic criteria to its series expansion and derivative.

What carries the argument

The Laguerre polynomial, treated as a normalized analytic function in the unit disk, together with the subordination relation and the Janowski condition on the real part of a normalized expression involving the function and its derivative.

If this is right

  • The Laguerre polynomial maps the unit disk to a region that is starlike in the Janowski sense.
  • Exponential subordination holds between the normalized Laguerre polynomial and the exponential function under the stated conditions.
  • The same parameter restrictions also guarantee Janowski convexity.
  • Explicit examples and corollaries confirm the bounds and show the results are sharp for certain limiting cases.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same approach of checking coefficient conditions and real-part inequalities could be applied to other orthogonal polynomials to obtain parallel geometric classifications.
  • Numerical sampling of the boundary curves for the parameter region would quickly test whether the derived inequalities are optimal.
  • In physical contexts that already use Laguerre polynomials, these new geometric constraints could restrict admissible solutions or initial conditions.

Load-bearing premise

The Laguerre polynomial is analytic and suitably normalized in the unit disk so that the standard definitions of subordination, starlikeness, and convexity apply to it without additional adjustments.

What would settle it

A specific choice of parameters for which the real part of the normalized expression involving the Laguerre polynomial and its derivative drops below the Janowski threshold on some point inside the unit disk.

read the original abstract

In this work, we have considered the Laguerre polynomial. This polynomial has been studied in several branches of theoretical physics and applied Mathematics. J. K. Prajapat at.al derived condition so that Laguerre polynomial satisfy convexity, strong starlikeness, close-to-convexity and strongly convexity. In this article, characteristics properties such as exponential subordination have been studied. Moreover Janowski starlikeness and convexity have been investigated for this polynomial. Several examples and corollaries have been mentioned to validates the result.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper studies the Laguerre polynomial in geometric function theory. Building on prior convexity results of Prajapat et al., it derives conditions under which the polynomial (or a suitable transform) satisfies exponential subordination and belongs to Janowski starlike and convex classes, supported by examples and corollaries.

Significance. If the central claims hold with proper normalization, the work extends the use of classical orthogonal polynomials to subordination and Janowski-type classes, potentially bridging applied mathematics/physics contexts with complex analysis. The provision of explicit examples strengthens falsifiability.

major comments (1)
  1. [Main results / Definitions section] The manuscript invokes prior convexity results but does not explicitly construct or verify a normalized function f with f(0)=0 and f'(0)=1. Standard Laguerre polynomials satisfy L_n(0)=1, so the definitions of Janowski starlikeness (subordination to (1+Az)/(1+Bz)) and exponential subordination cannot be applied directly without specifying the transform (e.g., z L_n'(z)/L_n'(0) or similar). This is load-bearing for all main results on starlikeness and convexity.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Clarify in the abstract and introduction the precise normalization and the range of parameters n for which the results hold.
  2. [Introduction] Ensure all cited prior results on convexity are referenced with specific theorems or equations from Prajapat et al. to avoid ambiguity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of our manuscript and for providing constructive feedback. We address the major comment below and plan to revise the manuscript accordingly to improve clarity.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Main results / Definitions section] The manuscript invokes prior convexity results but does not explicitly construct or verify a normalized function f with f(0)=0 and f'(0)=1. Standard Laguerre polynomials satisfy L_n(0)=1, so the definitions of Janowski starlikeness (subordination to (1+Az)/(1+Bz)) and exponential subordination cannot be applied directly without specifying the transform (e.g., z L_n'(z)/L_n'(0) or similar). This is load-bearing for all main results on starlikeness and convexity.

    Authors: We appreciate the referee's point regarding the normalization. The standard Laguerre polynomial L_n(z) indeed has L_n(0)=1, which means it is not directly in the class of normalized analytic functions required for starlikeness and subordination. Our results build upon the convexity conditions from Prajapat et al., where similar considerations apply. To address this, in the revised manuscript, we will explicitly construct and verify the normalized function f(z) with f(0)=0 and f'(0)=1. We will specify the appropriate transform of the Laguerre polynomial (such as one involving its derivative to achieve the normalization) and confirm that the main results on exponential subordination, Janowski starlikeness, and convexity hold for this normalized function. This clarification will be added to the Definitions section and referenced in the main results. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; builds on independent prior results

full rationale

The paper cites prior independent work by J. K. Prajapat et al. for convexity, strong starlikeness, close-to-convexity and strong convexity conditions on the Laguerre polynomial. It extends this foundation to study exponential subordination and Janowski starlikeness/convexity without reducing any central claim to a self-definition, fitted input renamed as prediction, or load-bearing self-citation chain. Normalization and analyticity assumptions are explicitly drawn from the referenced external results rather than imposed by construction within this manuscript. No ansatz smuggling, uniqueness theorems from the same authors, or renaming of known results as new derivations appear in the abstract or described derivation chain. The work is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The claims rest on standard domain assumptions from complex analysis and the analytic properties of the Laguerre polynomial as established in prior literature.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The Laguerre polynomial is analytic and suitably normalized in the unit disk or relevant domain so that subordination and starlikeness are defined.
    Required for the geometric properties studied to make sense in complex analysis.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5593 in / 1058 out tokens · 56361 ms · 2026-05-22T03:39:30.075570+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

16 extracted references · 16 canonical work pages

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