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NOTE ON THE THEORY OF LOGARITHMS.
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according as x is considered as the limit of x + yi, y = +, or of x + yi, y = ~. It
is natural to write
log (x + yi) = log r + di,
or what is the same thing,
and I take this equation as the definition of the logarithm of an imaginary quantity.
The question then arises, to find the value of the expression
log (x + yi) 4- log (x + y'i) — log (x + yi) (x + y i).
The preceding definition is, in fact, in the case of x positive, that given by
M. Cauchy in the Exercises de Mathématique, vol. I. [1826]; and he has there shown that
x, x', xcd -yy' being all of them positive, the above-mentioned expression reduces itself
to zero. The general definition is that given in my Mémoire sur quelques Formules
du Calcul Intégral, Liouville, vol. xn. [1847], p. 231 [4.9]; but I was wrong in asserting
that the expression always reduced itself to zero. We have, in fact, in general
when 1 — a/3 is positive; but when 1 — a/3 is negative (which implies that a, ft have
the same sign), then
where the upper or under sign is to be employed according as a and ft are positive
or negative; or what is the same thing,
where
1 - a/3 = +, e = 0,
1 — aft = —, e=±l = a + ft = a = ft.
This being premised, then writing
C. III.
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