Let $α ∈ (0, 1)$ be a fixed exponent, let $C > 0$, and let $f$ be an entire function satisfying $|f(z)| ≤ C|z|^α$
Show that $f$ is constant.
My attempt:
I'll show that using Liouville's theorem.
Let $z=x+iy$, $(x, y) \in \mathbb R^2$, then $|z| = {(x^2+y^2)}^{1/2}$ and so $|z|^α = {(x^2+y^2)}^{α/2}$.
Thus, $|f(z)|≤ C{(x^2+y^2)}^{α/2}$. And since $\mathbb C$ is endowed with $\mathbb R^2$, we can rewrite the above as $|f(x, y)|≤ {(x^2+y^2)}^{α/2}$, which shows that $f$ is continuous on $\mathbb C$ for all $z$. And we know that continuity implies boundness. So $f$ is also bounded.
And since it is entire, by Liouville's, it's constant.
Is my attempt correct?
Any other answers?