of positive radius R lying in the upper half-plane, centered at the origin. If the function f is of the form
with a positive parameter a, then Jordan's lemma states the following upper bound for the contour integral:
with equality when g vanishes everywhere, in which case both sides are identically zero. An analogous statement for a semicircular contour in the lower half-plane holds when a < 0.
Jordan's lemma yields a simple way to calculate the integral along the real axis of functions f(z) = ei a z g(z)holomorphic on the upper half-plane and continuous on the closed upper half-plane, except possibly at a finite number of non-real points z1, z2, …, zn. Consider the closed contour C, which is the concatenation of the paths C1 and C2 shown in the picture. By definition,
Since on C2 the variable z is real, the second integral is real:
The left-hand side may be computed using the residue theorem to get, for all R larger than the maximum of |z1|, |z2|, …, |zn|,
where Res(f, zk) denotes the residue of f at the singularity zk. Hence, if f satisfies condition (*), then taking the limit as R tends to infinity, the contour integral over C1 vanishes by Jordan's lemma and we get the value of the improper integral
satisfies the condition of Jordan's lemma with a = 1 for all R > 0 with R ≠ 1. Note that, for R > 1,
hence (*) holds. Since the only singularity of f in the upper half plane is at z = i, the above application yields
Since z = i is a simple pole of f and 1 + z2 = (z + i)(z − i), we obtain
so that
This result exemplifies the way some integrals difficult to compute with classical methods are easily evaluated with the help of complex analysis.
This example shows that Jordan's lemma can be used instead of a much simpler estimation lemma. Indeed, estimation lemma suffices to calculate , as well as , Jordan's lemma here is unnecessary.