The Prime Function, the Fay Trisecant Identity, and the van der Pauw Method: On Some Conjectures on the Resistivity of a Holey Conductor
2021
The van der Pauw method is a well-known experimental technique in the applied sciences for measuring physical quantities such as the electrical conductivity or the Hall coefficient of a given sample. Its popularity is attributable to its flexibility: the same method works for planar samples of any shape provided they are simply connected. Mathematically, the method is based on the cross-ratio identity. Much recent work has been done by applied scientists attempting to extend the van der Pauw method to samples with holes (“holey samples”). In this article we show the relevance of two new function theoretic ingredients to this area of application: the prime function associated with the Schottky double of a multiply connected planar domain and the Fay trisecant identity involving that prime function. We focus here on the single-hole (doubly connected, or genus one) case. Using these new theoretical ingredients we are able to prove several mathematical conjectures put forward in the applied science literature.
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