Difference between revisions of "Reciprocal of delta exponential"

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<strong>[[Reciprocal of delta exponential|Theorem]]:</strong> Let $\mathbb{T}$ be a [[time scale]], let $t,s \in \mathbb{T}$, and let $p \in \mathcal{R}(\mathbb{T},\mathbb{C})$ be a [[regressive function]]. The following formula holds:
 
<strong>[[Reciprocal of delta exponential|Theorem]]:</strong> Let $\mathbb{T}$ be a [[time scale]], let $t,s \in \mathbb{T}$, and let $p \in \mathcal{R}(\mathbb{T},\mathbb{C})$ be a [[regressive function]]. The following formula holds:
 
$$\dfrac{1}{e_p(t,s)}=e_{\ominus p}(s,t),$$
 
$$\dfrac{1}{e_p(t,s)}=e_{\ominus p}(s,t),$$
where $e_p$ denotes the [[delta exponential]] and $\ominus p$ denotes the [[circle minus]].
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where $e_p$ denotes the [[delta exponential]] and $\ominus p$ denotes [[circle minus]].
 
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<strong>Proof:</strong>  █  
 
<strong>Proof:</strong>  █  
 
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Revision as of 23:09, 31 May 2016

Theorem: Let $\mathbb{T}$ be a time scale, let $t,s \in \mathbb{T}$, and let $p \in \mathcal{R}(\mathbb{T},\mathbb{C})$ be a regressive function. The following formula holds: $$\dfrac{1}{e_p(t,s)}=e_{\ominus p}(s,t),$$ where $e_p$ denotes the delta exponential and $\ominus p$ denotes circle minus.

Proof: