Uniqueness of Meromorphic Functions With Respect To Their Shifts Concerning Derivatives

17 Sep 2020  ·  Xiao Huang ·

An example in the article shows that the first derivative of $f(z)=\frac{2}{1-e^{-2z}}$ sharing $0$ CM and $1,\infty$ IM with its shift $\pi i$ cannot obtain they are equal. In this paper, we study the uniqueness of meromorphic function sharing small functions with their shifts concerning its $k-th$ derivatives. We use a different method from Qi and Yang \cite {qy} to improves entire function to meromorphic function, the first derivative to the $k-th$ derivatives, and also finite values to small functions. As for $k=0$, we obtain: Let $f(z)$ be a transcendental meromorphic function of $\rho_{2}(f)<1$, let $c$ be a nonzero finite value, and let $a(z)\not\equiv\infty, b(z)\not\equiv\infty\in \hat{S}(f)$ be two distinct small functions of $f(z)$ such that $a(z)$ is a periodic function with period $c$ and $b(z)$ is any small function of $f(z)$. If $f(z)$ and $f(z+c)$ share $a(z),\infty$ CM, and share $b(z)$ IM, then either $f(z)\equiv f(z+c)$ or $$e^{p(z)}\equiv \frac{f(z+c)-a(z+c)}{f(z)-a(z)}\equiv \frac{b(z+c)-a(z+c)}{b(z)-a(z)},$$ where $p(z)$ is a non-constant entire function of $\rho(p)<1$ such that $e^{p(z+c)}\equiv e^{p(z)}$.

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Complex Variables 30D35