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[Home]The most remarkable formula in the world

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At least according to an entry in the notebook of then almost 15 year old Richard Feynman, "the most remarkable formula in the world" is:

eiπ + 1 = 0

where e is the base of the natural logarithm, i is the imaginary unit (an imaginary number with the property i2 = -1), and π is Archimedes' Constant Pi (the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter). The equation appears in Leonhard Euler's Introductio, published in Lausanne in 1748.

Feynman found this formula remarkable because it links some very fundamental mathematical constants:

The formula is a consequence of Euler's formula from complex analysis, which states that

eix = cos x + i · sin x

for any real number x. If we set x = π, then

eiπ = cos π + i · sin π,

and since cos(π) = -1 and sin(π) = 0, we get

eiπ = - 1

and

eiπ + 1 = 0.


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Last edited November 17, 2001 10:32 pm by The Anome (diff)
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