Mathematical functions
The lemniscate sine (red) and lemniscate cosine (purple) applied to a real argument, in comparison with the trigonometric sine y = sin(πx /ϖ ) (pale dashed red).
In mathematics , the lemniscate elliptic functions are elliptic functions related to the arc length of the lemniscate of Bernoulli . They were first studied by Giulio Fagnano in 1718 and later by Leonhard Euler and Carl Friedrich Gauss , among others.[ 1]
The lemniscate sine and lemniscate cosine functions, usually written with the symbols sl and cl (sometimes the symbols sinlem and coslem or sin lemn and cos lemn are used instead),[ 2] are analogous to the trigonometric functions sine and cosine. While the trigonometric sine relates the arc length to the chord length in a unit-diameter circle
x
2
+
y
2
=
x
,
{\displaystyle x^{2}+y^{2}=x,}
[ 3] the lemniscate sine relates the arc length to the chord length of a lemniscate
(
x
2
+
y
2
)
2
=
x
2
−
y
2
.
{\displaystyle {\bigl (}x^{2}+y^{2}{\bigr )}{}^{2}=x^{2}-y^{2}.}
The lemniscate functions have periods related to a number
ϖ
=
{\displaystyle \varpi =}
2.622057... called the lemniscate constant , the ratio of a lemniscate's perimeter to its diameter. This number is a quartic analog of the (quadratic )
π
=
{\displaystyle \pi =}
3.141592... , ratio of perimeter to diameter of a circle .
As complex functions , sl and cl have a square period lattice (a multiple of the Gaussian integers ) with fundamental periods
{
(
1
+
i
)
ϖ
,
(
1
−
i
)
ϖ
}
,
{\displaystyle \{(1+i)\varpi ,(1-i)\varpi \},}
[ 4] and are a special case of two Jacobi elliptic functions on that lattice,
sl
z
=
sn
(
z
;
i
)
,
{\displaystyle \operatorname {sl} z=\operatorname {sn} (z;i),}
cl
z
=
cd
(
z
;
i
)
{\displaystyle \operatorname {cl} z=\operatorname {cd} (z;i)}
.
Similarly, the hyperbolic lemniscate sine slh and hyperbolic lemniscate cosine clh have a square period lattice with fundamental periods
{
2
ϖ
,
2
ϖ
i
}
.
{\displaystyle {\bigl \{}{\sqrt {2}}\varpi ,{\sqrt {2}}\varpi i{\bigr \}}.}
The lemniscate functions and the hyperbolic lemniscate functions are related to the Weierstrass elliptic function
℘
(
z
;
a
,
0
)
{\displaystyle \wp (z;a,0)}
.
^ Fagnano (1718–1723) ; Euler (1761) ; Gauss (1917)
^ Gauss (1917) p. 199 used the symbols sl and cl for the lemniscate sine and cosine, respectively, and this notation is most common today: see e.g. Cox (1984) p. 316, Eymard & Lafon (2004) p. 204, and Lemmermeyer (2000) p. 240. Ayoub (1984) uses sinlem and coslem . Whittaker & Watson (1920) use the symbols sin lemn and cos lemn . Some sources use the generic letters s and c . Prasolov & Solovyev (1997) use the letter φ for the lemniscate sine and φ′ for its derivative.
^ The circle
x
2
+
y
2
=
x
{\displaystyle x^{2}+y^{2}=x}
is the unit-diameter circle centered at
(
1
2
,
0
)
{\textstyle {\bigl (}{\tfrac {1}{2}},0{\bigr )}}
with polar equation
r
=
cos
θ
,
{\displaystyle r=\cos \theta ,}
the degree-2 clover under the definition from Cox & Shurman (2005) . This is not the unit-radius circle
x
2
+
y
2
=
1
{\displaystyle x^{2}+y^{2}=1}
centered at the origin. Notice that the lemniscate
(
x
2
+
y
2
)
2
=
x
2
−
y
2
{\displaystyle {\bigl (}x^{2}+y^{2}{\bigr )}{}^{2}=x^{2}-y^{2}}
is the degree-4 clover.
^ The fundamental periods
(
1
+
i
)
ϖ
{\displaystyle (1+i)\varpi }
and
(
1
−
i
)
ϖ
{\displaystyle (1-i)\varpi }
are "minimal" in the sense that they have the smallest absolute value of all periods whose real part is non-negative.