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Understanding the most beautiful equation in Mathematics

77 点作者 dynamic99将近 12 年前

19 条评论

pestaa将近 12 年前
Loved the article, but there was this big jump between<p><pre><code> 1 - x^2/2! + x^4/4! - ... </code></pre> and<p><pre><code> cos x </code></pre> (and similarly with sin x). Why exactly are these equal?<p>(Also, just a nitpick, shouldn't the addition be actually subtraction before both elippses to demonstrate the alternating sign?)
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tome将近 12 年前
I think the actually remarkable equation is<p><pre><code> e^ix = cos x + i sin x </code></pre> The cliched "e^(i pi) + 1 = 0" is a fairly mundane consequence of the fact that pi was chosen to make this equation hold.
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senthil_rajasek将近 12 年前
I wish I could take my up vote back. I read this article and the power series expansion of the exponential function was not clear. So I looked up the wikipedia article (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_function" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_function</a>) and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_formula" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_formula</a> which were much more clearer.<p>Sadly, this article did nothing for me. I will remember to lookup wikipedia first...
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anonymous将近 12 年前
Personally, I prefer<p>e ^ i*tau = 1<p>But that's because I'm a tauist.
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ChuckMcM将近 12 年前
And after you read this you should read this: <a href="http://symbo1ics.com/blog/?p=1089" rel="nofollow">http://symbo1ics.com/blog/?p=1089</a> which was kind of fun as well.
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cmvkk将近 12 年前
Here's my favorite explanation of this formula:<p><a href="http://betterexplained.com/articles/intuitive-understanding-of-eulers-formula/" rel="nofollow">http://betterexplained.com/articles/intuitive-understanding-...</a>
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pfedor将近 12 年前
And just in case you weren't perfectly satisfied with the level of mathematical rigor of the article, here is a complete, formal, machine-verified and hyperlinked version of the proof: <a href="http://us.metamath.org/mpegif/eulerid.html" rel="nofollow">http://us.metamath.org/mpegif/eulerid.html</a>
j2kun将近 12 年前
There's some even more important gaps regarding analytic continuations of functions to complex numbers (and the resulting power series expansions). You can prove it this way, but it's not at all rigorous by today's standards.
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quchen将近 12 年前
And here I was hoping it would be aboke Stokes' Theorem ;-(
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betterunix将近 12 年前
I would say that the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory is the most beautiful result of all mathematics, though Euler's identity is certainly a contender.
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5teev将近 12 年前
Small typo:<p>Euler defined the function e^x in analysis as:<p><pre><code> e^x = lim(1+x/n)^n </code></pre> as x tends to infinity<p>Should be "as n tends to infinity".
unconed将近 12 年前
I find this view of e^z far more beautiful than a bunch of symbols rearranged by someone who thinks definitions provide insight...<p><a href="http://acko.net/files/mathbox/MathBox.js/examples/ComplexExponentiation.html" rel="nofollow">http://acko.net/files/mathbox/MathBox.js/examples/ComplexExp...</a>
mohas将近 12 年前
Can anyone name some of the actual uses of this equation in solving real world problems?
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alok-g将近 12 年前
&#62;&#62; Euler's brilliant mathematical mind replaced the real variable x with ix<p>Is there any proof that the equation remains true when x -&#62; ix transformation is made? OK, I know there is formal proof for this; can someone explain please? :-)
merraksh将近 12 年前
<i>Euler defined the function e^x in analysis as: e^x=lim(1+x/n)^n as x tends to infinity. So, we get:</i><p>It should be as n tends to infinity.&#60;/pedantic&#62;
JoeAltmaier将近 12 年前
I've seen it taken to the i'th power:<p>e^(i*pi)i = 1^i<p><pre><code> or </code></pre> e^-pi = 1^i<p>which seems very strange - e and pi are real numbers, so 1 to the i'th power must also be real?
comub将近 12 年前
There is nothing particularly beautiful in this, it's just a trivially obvious identity (once you know the relevant theory, of course).
togasystems将近 12 年前
I have this tattooed on my leg :) <a href="http://imgur.com/LcIlm5L" rel="nofollow">http://imgur.com/LcIlm5L</a>
aditgupta将近 12 年前
Guys, there's lot more here - <a href="http://functionspace.org/discussion/new" rel="nofollow">http://functionspace.org/discussion/new</a> :)