Euler's identity is named after the Swiss mathematician Leonard Euler. It is not clear that he invented it himself.[4]
Respondents to a Physics World poll called the identity "the most profound mathematical statement ever written", "uncanny and sublime", "filled with cosmic beauty" and "mind-blowing".[5]
Mathematical proof of Euler's Identity using Taylor Series
Many equations can be written as a series of terms added together. This is called a Taylor series.
Here, we see a pattern take form. seems to be a sum of sine and cosine's Taylor series, except with all of the signs changed to positive. The identity we are actually proving is .
So, on the left side is , whose Taylor series is
We can see a pattern here, that every second term is i times sine's terms, and that the other terms are cosine's terms.
On the right side is , whose Taylor series is the Taylor series of cosine, plus i times the Taylor series of sine, which can be shown as: