30 2. SPECIAL AND LIMIT SOLUTIONS
and define
7/J(z )
p(r) = p(r(z)). ~ - r.
Then the metric may be written as
g = dr2 + r2p2 de2.
Introduce ' Cartesian coordinates'
x ~ rcose,
y ~ rsine.
Then r^2 = x^2 + y^2 and we have
whence
x
dx = -dr -yde
r
dy = ¥_ dr + x de,
r
x y
dr = - dx + -dy
r r
y x
de= --r2 dx+ -r2 dy.
A simple calculation shows that
g = ( 1 + p2 r~ 1 y2) dx2 - ( 2xy p2 r~ 1) dx dy + ( 1 + p2 r~ 1 x2) dy2.
So g extends to a smooth metric if
f (r) ~ p(r):-1
r
extends to an even function which is smooth at r: = 0. By Taylor's theorem,
f ( )
= p (0) - 1 2p (0) p' (0) ~ dk (p^2 ) rk-^2 ( K -1)
r r2 + r + L.t drk kl + 0 r.
k=2 r=O
Hence f yields a smooth even function at zero if and only if p (0) = 1,
p' (0) = 0, and all odd derivatives of p^2 vanish at the origin. Noting that
dk(2) k- l
__ P_ = 2pp(k) + '"'c ·kP(j) P(k- j)
drk L.t J
j=l
for appropriate integers Cjk, we conclude by induction that f yields a smooth
even function at zero if and only if p (0) = 1 and p(^2 k+l) (0) = 0 for all k ?: 0.
To translate back to 7/J (z) = rp (r), we simply observe that
dk7/J dk-l p dk p
drk = k drk-l + r drk.
In particular, the observation
1 d7/J d7/J dp
- --= - =p+r-
<p d z dr dr'