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hyperbolic function

 
American Heritage Dictionary:

hyperbolic function


n.
Any of a set of six functions related, for a real or complex variable x, to the hyperbola in a manner analogous to the relationship of the trigonometric functions to a circle, including:
  1. The hyperbolic sine, defined by the equation sinh x = 1/2(exe -x).
  2. The hyperbolic cosine, defined by the equation cosh x = 1/2(ex + e -x).
  3. The hyperbolic tangent, defined by the equation tanh x = sinh x/cosh x.
  4. The hyperbolic cotangent, defined by the equation coth x = cosh x/sinh x.
  5. The hyperbolic secant, defined by the equation sech x = 1/cosh x.
  6. The hyperbolic cosecant, defined by the equation csch x = 1/sinh x.



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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

hyperbolic function

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In mathematics, one of a set of functions related to the hyperbola in the same way the trigonometric functions relate to the circle. They are the hyperbolic sine, cosine, tangent, secant, cotangent, and cosecant (written "sinh," "cosh," etc.). The hyperbolic equivalent of the fundamental trigonometric identity is cosh2z - sinh2z = 1. The hyperbolic sine and cosine, particularly useful for finding special types of integrals, can be defined in terms of exponential functions: sinhx = (ex - e-x) ¸ 2 and coshx = (ex + e-x) ¸ 2

For more information on hyperbolic function, visit Britannica.com.

Oxford Dictionary of Biochemistry:

hyperbolic function

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any one of a group of functions of an angle, analogous to the trigonometric functions, expressed as a relationship between the distances of a point on a hyperbola to the origin and to the coordinate axes. The group includes sinh (hyperbolic sine), defined as sinh x = (ex e−x)/2; cosh (hyperbolic cosine), defined as cosh x = (ex + e−x)/2; and tanh (hyperbolic tangent), defined as tanh x = (sinh x)/(cosh x). The corresponding reciprocal functions are cosech (hyperbolic cosecant), sech (hyperbolic secant), and coth (hyperbolic cotangent), respectively.

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Hyperbolic function

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A ray through the origin intercepts the hyperbola \scriptstyle x^2\ -\ y^2\ =\ 1 in the point \scriptstyle (\cosh\,a,\,\sinh\,a), where \scriptstyle a is twice the area between the ray and the \scriptstyle x-axis. For points on the hyperbola below the \scriptstyle x-axis, the area is considered negative (see animated version with comparison with the trigonometric (circular) functions).

In mathematics, hyperbolic functions are analogs of the ordinary trigonometric, or circular, functions. The basic hyperbolic functions are the hyperbolic sine "sinh" (play /ˈsɪn/ or /ˈʃn/), and the hyperbolic cosine "cosh" (play /ˈkɒʃ/), from which are derived the hyperbolic tangent "tanh" (play /ˈtæn/ [1], and so on, corresponding to the derived trigonometric functions. The inverse hyperbolic functions are the area hyperbolic sine "arsinh" (also called "asinh" or sometimes "arcsinh")[2] and so on.

Just as the points (cos t, sin t) form a circle with a unit radius, the points (cosh t, sinh t) form the right half of the equilateral hyperbola. Hyperbolic functions occur in the solutions of some important linear differential equations, for example the equation defining a catenary, of some cubic equations, and of Laplace's equation in Cartesian coordinates. The latter is important in many areas of physics, including electromagnetic theory, heat transfer, fluid dynamics, and special relativity.

The hyperbolic functions take real values for a real argument called a hyperbolic angle. In complex analysis, they are simply rational functions of exponentials, and so are meromorphic.

Hyperbolic functions were introduced in the 1760s independently by Vincenzo Riccati and Johann Heinrich Lambert.[3] Riccati used Sc. and Cc. ([co]sinus circulare) to refer to circular functions and Sh. and Ch. ([co]sinus hyperbolico) to refer to hyperbolic functions. Lambert adopted the names but altered the abbreviations to what they are today.[4] The abbreviations sh and ch are still used in some other languages, like French and Russian.

Contents

Standard algebraic expressions

sinh, cosh and tanh
csch, sech and coth
(a) cosh(x) is the average of exand e−x
(a) cosh(x) is the average of exand e−x
(b) sinh(x) is half the difference of ex and e−x
(b) sinh(x) is half the difference of ex and e−x
Hyperbolic functions (a) cosh and (b) sinh obtained using exponential functions ex and e x

The hyperbolic functions are:

  • Hyperbolic sine:
\sinh x = \frac {e^x - e^{-x}} {2} = \frac {e^{2x} - 1} {2e^x}
  • Hyperbolic cosine:
\cosh x = \frac {e^x + e^{-x}} {2} = \frac {e^{2x} + 1} {2e^x}
  • Hyperbolic tangent:
\tanh x = \frac{\sinh x}{\cosh x} = \frac {e^x - e^{-x}} {e^x + e^{-x}} = \frac{e^{2x} - 1} {e^{2x} + 1}
  • Hyperbolic cotangent:
\coth x = \frac{\cosh x}{\sinh x} = \frac {e^x + e^{-x}} {e^x - e^{-x}} = \frac{e^{2x} + 1} {e^{2x} - 1}
  • Hyperbolic secant:
\operatorname{sech}\,x = \left(\cosh x\right)^{-1} = \frac {2} {e^x + e^{-x}} = \frac{2e^x} {e^{2x} + 1}
  • Hyperbolic cosecant:
\operatorname{csch}\,x = \left(\sinh x\right)^{-1} = \frac {2} {e^x - e^{-x}} = \frac{2e^x} {e^{2x} - 1}

Hyperbolic functions can be introduced via imaginary circular angles:

  • Hyperbolic sine:
\sinh x =  - {\rm{i}} \sin {\rm{i}}x \!
  • Hyperbolic cosine:
\cosh x = \cos {\rm{i}}x \!
  • Hyperbolic tangent:
\tanh x = -{\rm{i}} \tan {\rm{i}}x \!
  • Hyperbolic cotangent:
\coth x = {\rm{i}}  \cot {\rm{i}}x \!
  • Hyperbolic secant:
\operatorname{sech}\,x = \sec { {\rm{i}} x} \!
  • Hyperbolic cosecant:
\operatorname{csch}\,x = {\rm{i}}\,\csc\,{\rm{i}}x \!

where i is the imaginary unit defined by i2 = −1.

The complex forms in the definitions above derive from Euler's formula.

Note that, by convention, sinh2 x means (sinh x)2, not sinh(sinh x), and similarly for the other hyperbolic functions when used with positive exponents. In contrast, sinh-1 x refers to the inverse function arsinh x and not to a reciprocal (and again likewise for the other hyperbolic functions).

Another notation for the hyperbolic cotangent function is ctnh x, though coth x is far more common.

Useful relations

\sinh(-x) = -\sinh x\,\!
\cosh(-x) =  \cosh x\,\!

Hence:

\tanh(-x) = -\tanh x\,\!
\coth(-x) = -\coth x\,\!
\operatorname{sech}(-x) =  \operatorname{sech}\, x\,\!
\operatorname{csch}(-x) = -\operatorname{csch}\, x\,\!

It can be seen that cosh x and sech x are even functions; the others are odd functions.

\operatorname{arsech}\,x=\operatorname{arcosh} \frac{1}{x}
\operatorname{arcsch}\,x=\operatorname{arsinh} \frac{1}{x}
\operatorname{arcoth}\,x=\operatorname{artanh} \frac{1}{x}

Hyperbolic sine and cosine satisfy the identity

\cosh^2 x - \sinh^2 x = 1\,

which is similar to the Pythagorean trigonometric identity. One also has

\tanh ^{2}x=1-\operatorname{sech}^{2}x
\coth ^{2}x=1+\operatorname{csch}^{2}x

for the other functions.

The hyperbolic tangent is the solution to the nonlinear boundary value problem[5]:

\frac 1 2 f'' = f^3 - f \qquad ; \qquad f(0) = f'(\infty) = 0

It can be shown that the area under the curve of cosh x is always equal to the arc length:[6]

\text{area} = \int_a^b{ \cosh{x} } \ dx= \int_a^b\sqrt{1+\left(\frac{d}{dx} \cosh{x}\right)^2} \ dx = \text{arc length}.

Sums of arguments:

\cosh {(x+y)} =\sinh{x}\cdot\sinh {y}+\cosh {x}\cdot\cosh {y},\!
\sinh {(x+y)} =\cosh{x}\cdot\sinh {y}+\sinh {x}\cdot\cosh {y},\!

Sum and difference of cosh and sinh:

\cosh{x}\!+\!\sinh{x} = e^x,\!
\cosh{x}\!-\!\sinh{x} = e^{-x}.\!

Inverse functions as logarithms

\operatorname {arsinh} \, x=\ln \left( x+\sqrt{x^{2}+1} \right)
\operatorname {arcosh} \, x=\ln \left( x+\sqrt{x^{2}-1} \right);x\ge 1
\operatorname {artanh} \, x=\tfrac{1}{2}\ln  \frac{1+x}{1-x} ;\left| x \right|<1
\operatorname {arcoth} \, x=\tfrac{1}{2}\ln  \frac{x+1}{x-1} ;\left| x \right|>1
\operatorname {arsech} \, x=\ln  \frac{1+\sqrt{1-x^{2}}}{x} ;0<x\le 1
\operatorname {arcsch} \, x=\ln \left( \frac{1}{x}+\frac{\sqrt{1+x^{2}}}{\left| x \right|} \right) ;x\ne 0

Derivatives

 \frac{d}{dx}\sinh x = \cosh x \,
 \frac{d}{dx}\cosh x = \sinh x \,
 \frac{d}{dx}\tanh x = 1 - \tanh^2 x = \hbox{sech}^2 x = 1/\cosh^2 x \,
 \frac{d}{dx}\coth x = 1 - \coth^2 x = -\hbox{csch}^2 x = -1/\sinh^2 x \,
 \frac{d}{dx}\ \hbox{csch}\,x = - \coth x \ \hbox{csch}\,x \,
 \frac{d}{dx}\ \hbox{sech}\,x = - \tanh x \ \hbox{sech}\,x \,
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{arsinh}\,x =\frac{1}{\sqrt{x^{2}+1}}
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{arcosh}\,x =\frac{1}{\sqrt{x^{2}-1}}
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{artanh}\,x =\frac{1}{1-x^{2}}
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{arcsch}\,x =-\frac{1}{\left| x \right|\sqrt{1+x^{2}}}
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{arsech}\,x =-\frac{1}{x\sqrt{1-x^{2}}}
\frac{d}{dx}\, \operatorname{arcoth}\,x =\frac{1}{1-x^{2}}

Standard Integrals

For a full list of integrals of hyperbolic functions, see list of integrals of hyperbolic functions

\int\sinh ax\,dx = a^{-1}\cosh ax + C
\int\cosh ax\,dx = a^{-1}\sinh ax + C
\int \tanh ax\,dx = a^{-1}\ln(\cosh ax) + C
\int \coth ax\,dx = a^{-1}\ln(\sinh ax) + C
\int{\frac{du}{\sqrt{a^{2}+u^{2}}}}=\sinh ^{-1}\left( \frac{u}{a} \right)+C
\int{\frac{du}{\sqrt{u^{2}-a^{2}}}}=\cosh ^{-1}\left( \frac{u}{a} \right)+C
\int{\frac{du}{a^{2}-u^{2}}}=a^{-1}\tanh ^{-1}\left( \frac{u}{a} \right)+C; u^{2}<a^{2}
\int{\frac{du}{a^{2}-u^{2}}}=a^{-1}\coth ^{-1}\left( \frac{u}{a} \right)+C; u^{2}>a^{2}
\int{\frac{du}{u\sqrt{a^{2}-u^{2}}}}=-a^{-1}\operatorname{sech}^{-1}\left( \frac{u}{a} \right)+C
\int{\frac{du}{u\sqrt{a^{2}+u^{2}}}}=-a^{-1}\operatorname{csch}^{-1}\left| \frac{u}{a} \right|+C

Where C is the constant of integration.

Taylor series expressions

It is possible to express the above functions as Taylor series:

\sinh x = x + \frac {x^3} {3!} + \frac {x^5} {5!} + \frac {x^7} {7!} +\cdots = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{x^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}

The function sinh x has a Taylor series expression with only odd exponents for x. Thus it is an odd function, that is, −sinh x = sinh(−x), and sinh 0 = 0.

\cosh x = 1 + \frac {x^2} {2!} + \frac {x^4} {4!} + \frac {x^6} {6!} + \cdots = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{x^{2n}}{(2n)!}

The function cosh x has a Taylor series expression with only even exponents for x. Thus it is an even function, that is, symmetric with respect to the y-axis. The sum of the sinh and cosh series is the infinite series expression of the exponential function.

\tanh x = x - \frac {x^3} {3} + \frac {2x^5} {15} - \frac {17x^7} {315} + \cdots = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{2^{2n}(2^{2n}-1)B_{2n} x^{2n-1}}{(2n)!}, \left |x \right | < \frac {\pi} {2}
\coth x = x^{-1} + \frac {x} {3} - \frac {x^3} {45} + \frac {2x^5} {945} + \cdots = x^{-1} + \sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{2^{2n} B_{2n} x^{2n-1}} {(2n)!}, 0 < \left |x \right | < \pi (Laurent series)
\operatorname {sech}\, x = 1 - \frac {x^2} {2} + \frac {5x^4} {24} - \frac {61x^6} {720} + \cdots = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{E_{2 n} x^{2n}}{(2n)!} , \left |x \right | < \frac {\pi} {2}
\operatorname {csch}\, x = x^{-1} - \frac {x} {6} +\frac {7x^3} {360} -\frac {31x^5} {15120} + \cdots = x^{-1} + \sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{ 2 (1-2^{2n-1}) B_{2n} x^{2n-1}}{(2n)!} , 0 < \left |x \right | < \pi (Laurent series)

where

B_n \, is the nth Bernoulli number
E_n \, is the nth Euler number

Comparison with circular trigonometric functions

Consider these two subsets of the Cartesian plane

A = \lbrace ( \cosh t , \sinh t ) : t \in R \rbrace \quad \text{and}\quad B = \lbrace (\cos t , \sin t ) : t \in R \rbrace .

Then A forms the right branch of the unit hyperbola {(x,y): x2 − y2 = 1}, while B is the unit circle. Evidently A \cap B = {(1,0)}. The primary difference is that the map tB is a periodic function while tA is not.

There is a close analogy of A with B through split-complex numbers in comparison with ordinary complex numbers, and its circle group.[clarification needed] In particular, the maps tA and tB are the exponential map in each case. They are both instances of one-parameter groups in Lie theory where all groups evolve out of the identity  \lbrace 1 \rbrace = \lbrace e^0 \rbrace = A \cap B . For contrast, in the terminology of topological groups, B forms a compact group while A is non-compact since it is unbounded.

The hyperbolic functions satisfy many identities, all of them similar in form to the trigonometric identities. In fact, Osborn's rule[7] states that one can convert any trigonometric identity into a hyperbolic identity by expanding it completely in terms of integral powers of sines and cosines, changing sine to sinh and cosine to cosh, and switching the sign of every term which contains a product of 2, 6, 10, 14, ... sinhs. This yields for example the addition theorems

\sinh(x+y) = \sinh x \cosh y + \cosh x \sinh y \,
\cosh(x+y) = \cosh x \cosh y + \sinh x \sinh y \,
\tanh(x+y) = \frac{\tanh x + \tanh y}{1 + \tanh x \tanh y} \,

the "double argument formulas"

\sinh 2x\ = 2\sinh x \cosh x \,
\cosh 2x\ = \cosh^2 x + \sinh^2 x = 2\cosh^2 x - 1 = 2\sinh^2 x + 1 \,
\tanh 2x\ = \frac{2\tanh x}{1 + \tanh^2 x} \,

and the "half-argument formulas"[8]

\sinh \tfrac{x}{2} = \sqrt{ \tfrac{1}{2}(\cosh x - 1)} \,    Note: This is equivalent to its circular counterpart multiplied by −1.
\cosh \tfrac{x}{2} = \sqrt{ \tfrac{1}{2}(\cosh x + 1)} \,    Note: This corresponds to its circular counterpart.

The derivative of sinh x is cosh x and the derivative of cosh x is sinh x; this is similar to trigonometric functions, albeit the sign is different (i.e., the derivative of cos x is −sin x).

The Gudermannian function gives a direct relationship between the circular functions and the hyperbolic ones that does not involve complex numbers.

The graph of the function a cosh(x/a) is the catenary, the curve formed by a uniform flexible chain hanging freely between two fixed points under uniform gravity.

Relationship to the exponential function

From the definitions of the hyperbolic sine and cosine, we can derive the following identities:

e^x = \cosh x + \sinh x\!

and

e^{-x} = \cosh x - \sinh x.\!

These expressions are analogous to the expressions for sine and cosine, based on Euler's formula, as sums of complex exponentials.

Hyperbolic functions for complex numbers

Since the exponential function can be defined for any complex argument, we can extend the definitions of the hyperbolic functions also to complex arguments. The functions sinh z and cosh z are then holomorphic.

Relationships to ordinary trigonometric functions are given by Euler's formula for complex numbers:

e^{i x} = \cos x + i \;\sin x
e^{-i x} = \cos x - i \;\sin x

so:

\cosh ix = \tfrac12(e^{i x} + e^{-i x}) = \cos x
\sinh ix = \tfrac12(e^{i x} - e^{-i x}) = i \sin x
\cosh(x+iy) = \cosh(x) \cos(y) + i \sinh(x) \sin(y) \,
\sinh(x+iy) = \sinh(x) \cos(y) + i \cosh(x) \sin(y) \,
\tanh ix = i \tan x \,
\cosh x = \cos ix \,
\sinh x = - i \sin ix \,
\tanh x = - i \tan ix \,

Thus, hyperbolic functions are periodic with respect to the imaginary component,with period i (πi for hyperbolic tangent and cotangent).

Hyperbolic functions in the complex plane
Complex Sinh.jpg
Complex Cosh.jpg
Complex Tanh.jpg
Complex Coth.jpg
Complex Sech.jpg
Complex Csch.jpg

\operatorname{sinh}(z)

\operatorname{cosh}(z)

\operatorname{tanh}(z)

\operatorname{coth}(z)

\operatorname{sech}(z)

\operatorname{csch}(z)

See also

References

  1. ^ tanh
  2. ^ Some examples of using arcsinh found in Google Books.
  3. ^ Robert E. Bradley, Lawrence A. D'Antonio, Charles Edward Sandifer. Euler at 300: an appreciation. Mathematical Association of America, 2007. Page 100.
  4. ^ Georg F. Becker. Hyperbolic functions. Read Books, 1931. Page xlviii.
  5. ^ Eric W. Weisstein. "Hyperbolic Tangent". MathWorld. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HyperbolicTangent.html. Retrieved 2008-10-20. 
  6. ^ N.P., Bali (2005). Golden Intergral Calculus. Firewall Media. p. 472. ISBN 8-170-08169-6. http://books.google.com/books?id=hfi2bn2Ly4cC. , Extract of page 472
  7. ^ G. Osborn, Mnemonic for hyperbolic formulae, The Mathematical Gazette, p. 189, volume 2, issue 34, July 1902
  8. ^ Peterson, John Charles (2003). Technical mathematics with calculus (3rd ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 1155. ISBN 0-766-86189-9. http://books.google.com/books?id=PGuSDjHvircC. , Chapter 26, page 1155

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American Heritage Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 1994-2012 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
 Oxford Dictionary of Biochemistry. Oxford University Press. Oxford Dictionary of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology © 1997, 2000, 2006 All rights reserved.  Read more
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