Questions tagged [elementary-functions]

For questions on elementary functions, functions of one variable built from a finite number of polynomials, exponentials and logarithms through composition and combinations using the four elementary operations $(+, –, ×, ÷)$.

In mathematics, an elementary function is a function of one variable built from a finite number of constants, exponentials and logarithms through composition, combinations using the four field operations $(+, –, ×, ÷)$ and continuation through removable singularities. Therefore elementary functions are analytic, but can be multi-valued. According to this definition, elementary functions include all algebraic functions, and by allowing these functions to be complex valued, trigonometric functions and their inverses become included in the elementary functions. For example: By taking branch cut of $\log$ to be negative imaginary axis and $-\frac{\pi}{2}\lt \arg(z)\lt \frac{3\pi}{2},$ we have real elemenrary functions

  • $\sqrt{x}=e^{1/2\log(x)}$ for all $x\ge 0$
  • $x^2=e^{2\log(x)}$ and similarly all polynomials
  • $\vert x\vert=\sqrt{x^2}$
  • $\sin(x)=\dfrac{1}{2i}(e^{ix}-e^{-ix})$
  • $\arctan x =\dfrac{1}{2i}\log\left(\dfrac{1+ix}{1-ix}\right)$

There are other definitions with bit more subtleties as well, see here. But there is no requirement that elementary functions includes "inverse" functions, in general. For example, local inverses of $f(z)=ze^z,$ known as (branches of) Lambert $W$-function are not elementary. Ritt, J. F.: Elementary functions and their inverses. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 27 (1925) (1) 68-90 answers which kinds of elementary functions can have an inverse which is an elementary function. Also, elementary functions do not required to closed under limits, infinite sums and integration, but they are closed under differentiation as a consequence of chain rule. This excludes many nice classes of functions from being elementary, such as elliptic functions, Bessel functions and hyper-geometric functions.

Observe that, the roots of polynomial equations are the implicitly defined functions of its constant coefficients. For polynomials of degree four and smaller there are explicit formulae for the roots (the formulae are elementary functions), but not for degrees five and higher. For example the unique real root of the polynomial $p(x)=x^5+x+a,$ called the Bring radical $\operatorname{BR}(a),$ is not elementary in the usual sense. But it is an elementary function in the following sense.

Liouvillian Elementary Functions

Elementary functions were introduced by Joseph Liouville in a series of papers from 1833 to 1841. An algebraic treatment of elementary functions known as Differential algebra was started by Joseph Fels Ritt in the 1930s. This generalization of "elementary functions" and their differential calculus allow us to solve two main problems:

  • What antiderivatives (of elementary functions) that can be expressed as elementary functions? See Liouville's theorem.

  • Solutions of linear differential equations in one variable (This subject is also known as the Picard–Vessiot theory/ Differential Galois theory, analogue of familiar Galois theory of polynomial equations aims to understand solutions of differential equations).

Let $(\mathbb{F},\partial)$ be a differential field with constants $\operatorname{const}(\mathbb{F}).$ A differential field extension $\mathbb{E}/\mathbb{F}$ is an elementary extension if there exists a tower of differential fields $$\mathbb{F}=\mathbb{F}_0\subseteq \mathbb{F}_1\subseteq\cdots \subseteq\mathbb{F}_n=\mathbb{E}$$

over the same field of constants such that each extension $\mathbb{F}_{j+1}/\mathbb{F}_j$ is either algebraic, exponential or logarithmic. See here for more details.

When $\operatorname{const}(\mathbb{F})=\mathbb{C},$ "Liouvillian elementary functions" $\mathcal{E}$ is the collection of all complex valued functions which lie in some elementary extension of $\mathbb{C}(x)$ (formal rational functions in a single complex variable) equip with usual derivative.

As a corollary to (above linked) Liouville's theorem, given two elementary functions $f, g$ the integral $$\displaystyle\int f e^g$$ is elementary if and only if $f=h'+hg'$ for some elementary function $h.$ Therefore logarithmic integral, dilogarithm, error function are not elementary. When this integral has an elementary solution one can use Risch algorithm to explicitly find it.

602 questions
2
votes
2 answers

Are Elementary Functions chosen by convention?

Are the elementary functions chosen by convention? What leads me to this question is that many non-elementary functions have power series representations, allowing them to be computed numerically, just as the trig and exponential functions. The sine…
Corsair64
  • 229
2
votes
0 answers

Is the modulo operation an elementary function?

Since mod operation can be expressed using atan and cot, can it be considered as an elementary function? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_function http://functions.wolfram.com/IntegerFunctions/Mod/27/02/
2
votes
2 answers

Is it possible to find such a $f$?

I search a continuous function $f : [0,+\infty[ \to \mathbb{R}$ such as : $\lim \limits_{x\to +\infty} \frac{1}{x} \int \limits_{0}^{x} f(t)\mathrm{d}t=\pm \infty$ and ($\lim \limits_{x\to +\infty}f(x)=l\in \mathbb{R}$ or $f$ does not have…
Maman
  • 3,300
2
votes
4 answers

What is the meaning of $n\log^2(n)$

I know this seems ridiculously an obvious thing but: What does $n\log^2(n)$ mean? Does it mean $n\log (\log(n))$ or $n\log(n)^2$? I am trying to compare it with $n\log(n)$ to check which one of the two is bigger for large $n\in \mathbb{N}$.
1
vote
2 answers

Inequality Expression

what happens when an inequality expression is divided by the same number. Did the sign stay the same each time or change directions? If the sign changed, explain what made the direction of the sign change. Describe a rule for this.
cianna
  • 11
1
vote
4 answers

Equation , powers of two

I want to find the sum of the roots of the equation $$4(4^x + 4^{-x}) - 23(2^x + 2^{-x}) + 40 = 0 $$ in real numbers. I tried the substitution $ 2^x = t $ but then it turns into a quartic equation which I couldn't solve. I think its roots sum to…
1
vote
1 answer

$T: [0,1)\to [0,1), x\mapsto 10x-\lfloor 10x\rfloor$

Consider $T: [0,1)\to [0,1), x\mapsto 10x-\lfloor 10x\rfloor$. Is that the same as $$ 10x (mod 1)? $$ or in which sense is that multiplication with 10 mod 1?
user34632
1
vote
1 answer

if $f(x) = |3x - 1|$ so what is the sum of all $x$ such that $f(f(x)) = x$?

Question: if $f(x) = |3x - 1|$ so the sum of all values of x that satisfies $f(f(x)) = x$ is? alternatives: a) $11/10$ b) $21/20$ c) $27/20$ d) $23/20$ e) $5/4$ My try: I've thought that I had to calculate $|3x - 1| = x$, since $f(f(x)) =…
user1158833
1
vote
2 answers

Operation on functions, which of the following is true?

If $f(x) = 2x + 1$ and $g(x) = x + 3$, then which of the following is true? (A) $(f + g)x = f(x) + g(x)$ (B) $(f \circ g)(x) = (g \circ f)(x)$ (C) $(fg)(x) = g[f(x)]$ (D) $(fg)(x) = f[g(x)]$ I came across this question while studying "Functions".…
1
vote
1 answer

Cubic with turning point near zero

I want a bunch of cubics which have a turning point near the $x$-axis, both above and below the $x$-axis. That way, the graph might not easily show whether there is a zero there, and Newton's method might give the answer. I want a bunch so that each…
Empy2
  • 50,853
1
vote
1 answer

What does this theorem of continuity of elementary function means?

I saw in my lecture not about this theorem of elementary function continuity:” All elementary functions are C1 in the interior of their maximal domain except the norm when the argument is zero and the powers with exponent $\alpha \in (0,1)$ when the…
Eileen
  • 87
1
vote
2 answers

Basic: $x^2 - 1$ and $-x^2 + 1$ have the same roots and therefore both could be written as $(x+1)(x-1).$ I guess that’s not right...

I know they aren’t the same function but what’s the issue here? What am I not taking into account? Sorry for such a basic question, it just confuses me.
1
vote
1 answer

What does “$\forall$” mean?

I am studying cryptography and in the first lesson I saw "$\forall$" element in the following formula: $\forall x\neq x_0:P(X) = 0$ What does $\forall$ mean?
R1w
  • 167
1
vote
1 answer

Inverse relation ;)

wise people! A question of someone who doesn't know too much about Maths! You all know that: Δx . Δp ≥ h/2 I have found that formula written as: The possible variation of the position of a body in an inverse relation to the possible variation of the…
1
vote
2 answers

k-th Elementary Symmetric Function : Definition

My textbook provided following problem set: Let $e_k = e_k(x_1, x_2, ... , x_n)$ denote the k-th elementary symmetric function in n variables. Show that the sequence $\{e_k(m_1,m_2,...,m_n)\}_{k\ge0}$ is log-concave when $m_i$s are positive…
Beverlie
  • 2,645