Eulers identity
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- For other meanings, see Euler function (disambiguation)
In complex analysis, Euler's identity is the equation
,
where
is the base of the natural logarithm,
is the imaginary unit, the complex number whose square is negative one, and
is Pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter.
The identity is also sometimes expressed equivalently as
in order to make explicit the relationship between these five fundamental mathematical constants.
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Derivation
The equation appears in Leonhard Euler's Introductio, published in Lausanne in 1748. The identity is a special case of Euler's formula from complex analysis, which states that
for any real number
. If
, then
and since, by definition
and
it follows that
Perceptions of the identity
Benjamin Peirce, the noted 19th century mathematician and Harvard professor, after proving the identity in a lecture, said, "Gentlemen, that is surely true, it is absolutely paradoxical; we cannot understand it, and we don't know what it means. But we have proved it, and therefore we know it must be the truth."1
Richard Feynman called Euler's formula (from which the identity is derived) "the most remarkable formula in mathematics".2 Feynman, as well as many others, found this formula remarkable because it links some very fundamental mathematical constants:
- The number 0, the identity element for addition (for all a, a + 0 = 0 + a = a). See Group (mathematics).
- The number 1, the identity element for multiplication (for all a, a × 1 = 1 × a = a).
- The number π is a fundamental constant of trigonometry, Euclidean geometry, and mathematical analysis.
- The number e is a fundamental in connections to the study of logarithms and in calculus (such as in describing growth behaviors, as the solution to the simplest growth equation dy / dx = y with initial condition y(0) = 1 is y = ex).
- The imaginary unit i (where i2 = −1) is a unit in the complex numbers. Introducing this unit yields all non-constant polynomial equations soluble in the field of complex numbers (see fundamental theorem of algebra).
Furthermore, all the most fundamental operators of arithmetic are also present: equality, addition, multiplication and exponentiation.
References
- Feynman, Richard P., The Feynman Lectures on Physics, vol. I Addison-Wesley (1977), ISBN 0201020106, ISBN 02010211161
- Maor, Eli, e: The Story of a number, Princeton University Press (May 4, 1998), ISBN 0691058547
Notes
Template:Ent Maor, p. 160. Maor cites Edward Kasner and James Newman's, Mathematics and the Imagination, New York: Simon and Schuster (1940), pp. 103–104, as the source for this quote. Template:Ent Feynman p. 22-10.
External links
- Proof of Euler's Identity by Julius O. Smith III
- Proof of Euler's Identity for a Layman by Ian Henderson
- Proof of Euler's Relation by Craig Lewis
de:Eulersche Identität es:Identidad de Euler fr:Identité d'Euler it:Identità di Eulero ko:오일러의 등식 nl:Formule van Euler he:זהות אוילר ja:オイラーの等式 pt:Identidade de Euler sl:Eulerjeva enačba th:เอกลักษณ์ของออยเลอร์ zh:歐拉恆等式
