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Main Author: Inoué, Takao
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.13755
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author Inoué, Takao
author_facet Inoué, Takao
contents This short essay celebrates the mathematical meaning of Pi Day through Euler's formula \[ e^{ix}=\cos x+i\sin x, \] from which Euler's identity \[ e^{iπ}+1=0 \] follows immediately. We briefly note the historical background of the formula, usually traced to Euler's \emph{Introductio in analysin infinitorum} (1748), while also mentioning Roger Cotes's earlier precursor of 1714. We compare Euler's identity, in an explicitly analogical way, with several famous formulas in physics in order to highlight its remarkable compactness and conceptual richness. We then consider a number of joyful variations arising from the same Eulerian source, including the negative-angle case, prime-number multiples, the substitution $x=π/2$, and a functional-equation variation of the form \[ f(iπx)+1=0. \] This last variation leads naturally to a contrast between rigidity in the holomorphic setting and freedom in the discrete interpolation setting. The central aim is to organize these observations into two simple families of variations: geometric-angle variations and functional-equation variations. The earlier part of the exposition is intended to be accessible to motivated high-school students, while the later discussion points toward more advanced ideas from complex analysis.
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spellingShingle Celebrating the Day of $π$: Joyful Variations on Euler's Identity
Inoué, Takao
History and Overview
01A50, 30A10, 30E05
This short essay celebrates the mathematical meaning of Pi Day through Euler's formula \[ e^{ix}=\cos x+i\sin x, \] from which Euler's identity \[ e^{iπ}+1=0 \] follows immediately. We briefly note the historical background of the formula, usually traced to Euler's \emph{Introductio in analysin infinitorum} (1748), while also mentioning Roger Cotes's earlier precursor of 1714. We compare Euler's identity, in an explicitly analogical way, with several famous formulas in physics in order to highlight its remarkable compactness and conceptual richness. We then consider a number of joyful variations arising from the same Eulerian source, including the negative-angle case, prime-number multiples, the substitution $x=π/2$, and a functional-equation variation of the form \[ f(iπx)+1=0. \] This last variation leads naturally to a contrast between rigidity in the holomorphic setting and freedom in the discrete interpolation setting. The central aim is to organize these observations into two simple families of variations: geometric-angle variations and functional-equation variations. The earlier part of the exposition is intended to be accessible to motivated high-school students, while the later discussion points toward more advanced ideas from complex analysis.
title Celebrating the Day of $π$: Joyful Variations on Euler's Identity
topic History and Overview
01A50, 30A10, 30E05
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.13755