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The exponential function of classical analysis given by the series,
is the solution of the differential equation
with initial value .
It is also the limit of the following sequence of polynomial functions
This classical function is defined on the real line (or the complex plane). To generalise it to other manifolds, we need two things:
So in the end we have, for any point on a differentiable manifold with an affine connection , a map , which is defined at least on a neighbourhood of in the tangent space .
Note that here comes from the initial value ; we usually take when we work in a Lie group, but otherwise we are really generalising the classical exponential function ; every solution to takes this form.
Classically, there are some other functions called ‘exponential’; given any nonzero real (or complex) number , the map (or even ) is also an exponential map. Using the natural logarithm, we can define in terms of the natural exponential map :
So while is traditionally called the ‘base’, it is really the number that matters, or even better the operation of multiplication by . This operation is an endomorphism of the real line (or complex plane), and every such endomorphism takes this form for some nonzero (and some branch of the natural logarithm, in the complex case). So we see that this generalised exponential map is simply the composite of the natural exponential map after a linear endomorphism.
See also at flow of a vector field.
Let be a differentiable manifold, let be an affine connection on , and let be a point in . Then by the general theory of differential equations, there is a unique maximally defined partial function from the tangent space to such that:
This function is the natural exponential map on at relative to . We have , where is some neighbourhood of in . If is complete? (relative to ), then will be all of .
Let be a Riemannian manifold (or a pseudo-Riemannian manifold) and let be a point in . Then may be equipped with the Levi-Civita connection , so we define the natural Riemannian exponential map on at to be the natural exponential map on at relative to .
Given any endomorphism , we can also consider the exponential map on at relative to with logarithmic base , which is simply . We say ‘logarithmic base’ since a classical exponential function with base corresponds to an exponential function whose logarithmic base is multiplication by .
Recall that a geodesic is a curve on a manifold whose velocity is constant (as measured along that curve relative to a given affine connection). Working naïvely, we may write
pretend that this is a differential equation for a function , and take the solution
where is given by the initial value . We recognise this as being, morally, . This suggests (although we need more work for a proof) the following result:
Let be a differentiable manifold, let be an affine connection on , and let be a point in . Given a tangent vector at , there is a unique maximal geodesic on tangent to at . If is defined (which it will be whenever is complete? and may be in any case), we have . In any case, we have for sufficiently small .
Let be any sequentially Cauchy complete Archimedean ordered field, and let be the forgetful functor which takes an -algebra to its underlying -vector space . Given any -algebra whose underlying -vector space is finite-dimensional, each element of could be expressed as a linear combination, a finite sum of basis vectors. Then one could define the exponential function as either
or
since according to the algebraic limit theorem, limits distribute over finite sums.
In particular, this is how exponential functions are defined in Clifford algebras and matrix algebras. However, the exponential functions in non-commutative algebras are not abelian group homomorphisms, because multiplication is not commutative while addition is commutative.
The dual number real algebra has a notion of exponential function, which is the solution to the functional equation with .
In general, Archimedean ordered fields which are not sequentially Cauchy complete do not have an exponential function. Nevertheless, the exponential map is still guaranteed to be a partial function, because every Archimedean ordered field is a Hausdorff space and thus a sequentially Hausdorff space. Thus, an axiom could be added to an Archimedean ordered field to ensure that the exponential partial function is actually a total function:
Axiom of exponential function: For all elements , there exists a unique element such that for all positive elements , there exists a natural number such that for all natural numbers , if , then (or equivalently, ).
There is another axiom which uses the fact that derivatives of functions are well defined in the ordered local Artin -algebra by the equation :
Axiom of exponential function: Let be the ordered local Artin -algebra, with non-zero non-positive non-negative nilpotent element where and canonical -algebra homomorphism . There exists a unique function and a function such that for every element , , , and .
In classical mathematics, one could prove that the modulated Cantor real numbers are sequentially Cauchy complete and equivalent to the HoTT book real numbers . However, in constructive mathematics, the above cannot be proven; while the HoTT book real numbers are still sequentially Cauchy complete, the modulated Cantor real numbers in general cannot be proven to be sequentially Cauchy complete. In particular, this means that the sequences
do not have a limit for all modulated Cantor real numbers . However, the sequences, by definition of , do have a limit for all rational numbers ; this means that one could restrict the domain of the exponential function to the rational numbers , and define it in the usual manner:
Note: this section is under repair.
The classical exponential function or satisfies the fundamental property:
The function is a homomorphism taking addition to multiplication:
A number of proofs may be given. One rests on the combinatorial binomial identity
(which crucially depends on the fact that multiplication is commutative), whereupon
An alternative proof begins with the observation that is the solution to the system , . For each , the function is a solution to the system , , as is the function . Then by uniqueness of solutions to ordinary differential equations (over connected domains; see, e.g., here), , i.e., for all .1
Let be Lie group and let be its Lie algebra , the tangent space to the identity element . Then may be equipped with the canonical left-invariant connection or the canonical right-invariant connection . It turns out that the natural Riemannian exponential maps on at relative to and are the same; we define this to be the natural Lie exponential map on at the identity, denoted simply . Several nice properties follow:
(to be expanded on)
A logarithm is a local section of an exponential map.
Discussion in constructive analysis of the exponential function on real numbers:
Errett Bishop, §7 in: Foundations of Constructive Analysis, McGraw-Hill (1967)
Errett Bishop, Douglas Bridges §7 in: Constructive Analysis, Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 279, Springer (1985) [doi:10.1007/978-3-642-61667-9]
See also:
Wikipedia, exponential map (Lie theory), derivative of the exponential map, exponential map (Riemannian geometry))
Springer eom: exponential mapping
An extensive treatment for the general exponential map for an affine connection, for exponential map for Riemannian manifolds and the one for Lie groups is
Specifically for Lie groups, a different detailed treatment of the exponential map is in
Some nice historical notes are in
Discussion in point-free topology:
Ming Ng, Steve Vickers, Point-free Construction of Real Exponentiation, Logical Methods in Computer Science 18 3 (2022) [doi:10.46298/lmcs-18(3:15)2022, arXiv:2104.00162]
Steve Vickers, The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus point-free, with applications to exponentials and logarithms [arXiv:2312.05228]
A previous edit offered even more detail: “An alternative proof begins with the premise that each solution of the ordinary differential equation is locally constant. Suppose is a complex number. As , we find that . Hence, by the premise and the connectedness of the domain of (either or ), we obtain . The initial condition then yields . The result follows by setting .” ↩
Last revised on December 12, 2023 at 09:58:51. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.