Derivatives of f(x)=a^x
A First Look at Taylor Series
Proof of Euler's Identity
Contents
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We may define imaginary exponents the same way that all
sufficiently smooth real-valued functions of a real variable are
generalized to the complex case--using Taylor series. A
Taylor series expansion is just a polynomial (possibly of infinitely
high order), and polynomials involve only addition, multiplication,
and division. Since these elementary operations are also defined for
complex numbers, any smooth function of a real variable
may be
generalized to a function of a complex variable
by simply
substituting the complex variable
for the real variable
in the Taylor series expansion of
.
Let
, where
is any positive real number. The Taylor
series expansion expansion about
(``Maclaurin series''),
generalized to the complex case is then
 |
(3.1) |
This is well defined, provided the series converges for every
finite
(see problem Problem 8). We have
, so the first term is no problem. But what is
? In
other words, what is the derivative of
at
? Once we find
the successive derivatives of
at
, we will have
the definition of
for any complex
.
Derivatives of f(x)=a^x
A First Look at Taylor Series
Proof of Euler's Identity
Contents
Global Contents
Global Index
  Index
  Search
``Mathematics of the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)'',
by Julius O. Smith III,
W3K Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9745607-0-7.
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Copyright © 2003-10-09 by Julius O. Smith III
Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA),
Stanford University
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