Comments on Euler's Formula

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Rnhmjoj said:

Agreed, the full formula is much more intersting and deep: it shows there is a mapping between the reals and the circle group that preserves the structure (turns addition into multiplication). This concept leads to the very general exponential map of a Lie algebra to a Lie group and Pontryagin duality, which is the essence of Fourier transform.

04 Jun 2021 13:17 GMT (#1 of 5 comments)

Vishnu Gupta said:

It unifies algebra, trigonometry, complex numbers, and calculus.

I vividly remember my maths teacher impressing us upon what you stated above. By far the best math teacher I had. He didn't work out the proof on the board but made us work it out, took us on a journey, him as a guide, so to speak.

04 Jun 2021 13:18 GMT (#2 of 5 comments)

Cuspy Code said:

In a way it's analogous to how Einstein's \( E = mc^2 \) is a special case of how the norm of the four-momentum is defined in special relativity, which is \( mc = \sqrt{(E/c)^2 - p^2 \}. For the special case of a stationary object we have \( p = 0, \) so \( E = mc^2 \) follows automatically. But the special case is somehow more memorable and more famous, and I believe something similar has happened with Euler's identity.

04 Jun 2021 13:24 GMT (#3 of 5 comments)

User23 said:

Visual Complex Analysis is the text that introduced me to this concept. The functions \( \cos \) and \( \sin \) suddenly look a lot like accessor functions for a two member object.

04 Jun 2021 13:36 GMT (#4 of 5 comments)

Lumost said:

It's a unification of geometry and algebra in 2 dimensions, but generalizations beyond that are scarce. Effectively we're left with a solution where we can represent any space in dimensions modulo 2.

While quaternions and some higher dimensional complex numbers exist, is there a unified formula expressing Euler's formula for arbitrary numbers of dimensions? Is there one for an infinite dimension space?

04 Jun 2021 14:44 GMT (#5 of 5 comments)
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