Details, Explanation and Meaning About Multivalued function

Multivalued function Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

; because the element 3, in X, is associated with two elements b and c, in Y.]]

In mathematics, a multivalued function is a total relation; i.e. every input is associated with one or more outputs. Strictly speaking, a "well-defined" function associates one, and only one, output to any particular input. The term "multivalued function" is, technically, a misnomer: true functions are single-valued.

Examples

  • Each real or complex number except 0 has two square roots. Each complex number has three cube roots.

  • Inverse trigonometric functions are multiple-valued because trigonometric functions are periodic. We have tan(π/4) = tan(5π/4) = tan(−3π/4) = ... = 1 . Consequently arctan(1) may be thought of as having multiple values, among them π/4, 5π/4, −3π/4, etc.

  • The natural logarithm function from the positive reals to the reals is single-valued, but its generalization to complex numbers (excluding 0) is multiple-valued, because the natural exponential function exp(z) (evaluated at complex arguments z) is periodic with period 2πi. Denoting this multi-valued function by "Log", with a capital "L" to distinguish it from its single-valued counterpart defined only for positive real arguments, the values assumed by Log(e) are 1 + 2πin for integers n.

Multivalued functions of a complex variable have branch points. For the nth root and logarithm functions, 0 is a branch point, for the arctangent functions, the imaginary units i and −i are branch points.

See also


This is an Article on Multivalued function. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Multivalued function


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything