Euler's identity
Euler's identity, a special case of Euler's formula, is the following:
is the imaginary unit (an imaginary number with the property i² = -1), and
is Archimedes' constant pi (π, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter). It was called "the most remarkable formula in mathematics" by Richard Feynman. Feynman found this formula remarkable because it links some very fundamental mathematical constants. Here are some interesting properties of these constants:
- The number 0 is the identity element for addition (for all a, a+0=0+a=a). See Group (mathematics).
- The number 1 is the identity element for multiplication (for all a, a*1=1*a=a). Both 0 and 1 are elementary for counting and arithmetic.
- The number
is a fundamental number for trigonometry.
is a constant related to our world being Euclidean, on small scales at least (otherwise, the ratio of the length of the circumference of circle to its diameter would not be a universal constant, i.e. the same for all circumferences).
- The number
is a fundamental number for logarithms. Also,
is important in describing growth behaviors, as the solution to the simplest growth equation
with initial condition
is
.
- Finally, the imaginary unit
(where i² = -1) is a unit in the complex numbers, and is the simplest purely imaginary complex number. Introducing this unit yields all non-constant polynomial equations soluble in the field of complex numbers. (see Fundamental Theorem of Algebra).
The formula is a special case of Euler's formula from complex analysis, which states that
. If we set
, then
References
- Feynman RP - The Feynman Lectures on Physics, vol. I - part 1. Inter European Editions, Amsterdam (1975)











