- Euler's identity
[
300px|thumb|right|The_exponential function "e""z" can be defined as the limit of nowrap|(1 + "z"/"N")"N", as "N" approaches infinity, and thus "e""iπ" is the limit of nowrap|(1 + "iπ/N")"N". In this animation "N" takes various increasing values from 1 to 100. The computation of nowrap|(1 + "iπ/N")"N" is displayed as the combined effect of "N" repeated multiplications in the (1 + "iπ/N")"N". It can be seen that as "N" gets larger nowrap|(1 + "iπ/N")"N" approaches a limit of −1.Inmathematical analysis , Euler's identity, named afterLeonhard Euler , is the equation:
where: is Euler's number, the base of the natural logarithm,: is the
imaginary unit , one of the twocomplex number s whose square is negative one (the other is ), and : ispi , theratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter.Euler's identity is also sometimes called Euler's equation.
Nature of the identity
Euler's identity is considered by many to be remarkable for its
mathematical beauty . Three basicarithmetic operations occur exactly once each:addition ,multiplication , andexponentiation . The identity also links five fundamentalmathematical constant s:
* The number 0.
* The number 1.
* The number "π", which is ubiquitous intrigonometry , geometry ofEuclidean space , andmathematical analysis .
* The number "e", the base ofnatural logarithms , which also occurs widely in mathematical analysis (e ≈ 2.71828).
* The number "i", imaginary unit of thecomplex number s, which contain the roots of all nonconstant polynomials and lead to deeper insight into many operators, such as integration.Furthermore, in mathematical analysis, equations are commonly written with zero on one side.
Perceptions of the identity
A reader poll conducted by "Mathematical Intelligencer" named the identity as the most beautiful theorem in mathematics. [Nahin, 2006, p.2–3 (poll published in summer 1990 issue).] Another reader poll conducted by "Physics World" in 2004 named Euler's identity the "greatest equation ever", together with
Maxwell's equations . [Crease, 2004.]The book "Dr. Euler's Fabulous Formula" [2006] , by Paul Nahin (Professor Emeritus at the University of New Hampshire), is devoted to Euler's identity; it is 400 pages long. The book states that the identity sets "the gold standard for mathematical beauty." [Cited in Crease, 2007.]
Constance Reid claimed that Euler's identity was "the most famous formula in all mathematics." [Reid.]Gauss is reported to have commented that if this formula was not immediately apparent to a student on being told it, the student would never be a first-class mathematician. [Derbyshire p.210.]
After proving the identity in a lecture,
Benjamin Peirce , a notednineteenth century mathematician andHarvard professor, said, "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." [Maor p.160 and Kasner & Newman p.103–104.]Stanford mathematics professor
Keith Devlin says, "Like a Shakespearean sonnet that captures the very essence of love, or a painting that brings out the beauty of the human form that is far more than just skin deep, Euler's equation reaches down into the very depths of existence." [Nahin, 2006, p.1.]Derivation
The identity is a special case of
Euler's formula fromcomplex analysis , which states that:
for any
real number "x". (Note that the arguments to the trigonometric functions "sin" and "cos" are taken to be inradians .) In particular, if:
then
:
Since
:
and
:
it follows that
:
which gives the identity
:
Generalization
Euler's identity is a special case of the more general identity that the "n"th
roots of unity , for "n" > 1, add up to 0::Euler's identity is the case where "n" = 2.Attribution
While Euler wrote about his formula relating "e" to "cos" and "sin" terms, there is no known record of Euler actually stating or deriving the simplified identity equation itself; moreover, the formula was likely known before Euler. [Sandifer.] (If so, then this would be an example of
Stigler's law of eponymy .) Thus, the question of whether or not the identity should be attributed to Euler is unanswered.ee also
*
Exponential function
*Gelfond's constant Notes
References
* Crease, Robert P., " [http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/17/10/2 The greatest equations ever] ", PhysicsWeb, October 2004.
* Crease, Robert P. " [http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/20/3/3/1 Equations as icons] ," PhysicsWeb, March 2007.
* Derbyshire, J. "Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics" (New York: Penguin, 2004).
* Kasner, E., and Newman, J., "Mathematics and the Imagination" (Bell and Sons, 1949).
* Maor, Eli, "e: The Story of a number" (Princeton University Press, 1998), ISBN 0-691-05854-7
* Nahin, Paul J., "Dr. Euler's Fabulous Formula: Cures Many Mathematical Ills" (Princeton University Press, 2006), ISBN 978-0691118222
* Reid, Constance, "From Zero to Infinity" (Mathematical Association of America, various editions).
* Sandifer, Ed, " [http://www.maa.org/editorial/euler/How%20Euler%20Did%20It%2040%20Greatest%20Hits.pdf Euler's Greatest Hits] ", MAA Online, February 2007.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.