Difference between revisions of "Relationship between logarithm (multivalued) and logarithm"

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==References==
 
==References==
* {{BookReference|Handbook of mathematical functions|1964|Milton Abramowitz|author2=Irene A. Stegun|prev=Logarithm (multivalued)|next=Logarithm (multivalued) of product is a sum of logarithms (multivalued)}}: 4.1.5
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* {{BookReference|Handbook of mathematical functions|1964|Milton Abramowitz|author2=Irene A. Stegun|prev=Logarithm (multivalued)|next=Logarithm (multivalued) of product is a sum of logarithms (multivalued)}}: $4.1.5$
  
 
[[Category:Theorem]]
 
[[Category:Theorem]]
 
[[Category:Unproven]]
 
[[Category:Unproven]]

Revision as of 17:24, 27 June 2016

Theorem

The following formula holds: $$\mathrm{Log}\left(re^{i\theta}\right) = \left\{ \log(re^{i\theta}+2k\pi i \colon k \in \mathbb{Z} \right\},$$ where $\mathrm{Log}$ denotes the logarithm (multivalued), $\log$ denotes the logarithm, $i$ denotes the imaginary number, and $\pi$ denotes pi.

Proof

Note

Sometimes this formula is written as $$\mathrm{Log}\left(re^{i\theta}\right) = \log(re^{i\theta})+2k\pi i, \quad k \in \mathbb{Z}.$$ Writing it this way emphasizes the multi-valued nature of $\mathrm{Log}$. For our purposes, this is not sufficient since we defined the codomain of the multivalued logarithm to be the power set of $\mathbb{C}$.

References