In Banach algebea $A$ if $ab=ba$ prove that $e^{a+b}=e^ae^b$











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Let $A$ be aBanach algebra




if $ab=ba$ then prove that $e^{a+b}=e^ae^b$




I've started by $e^a=sum _{n=0}^{infty }frac{a^n}{n!}$, Iwant to khow this is correct way?



Any help will be greatly appreciated.










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  • yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday












  • @Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
    – user62498
    yesterday












  • Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












Let $A$ be aBanach algebra




if $ab=ba$ then prove that $e^{a+b}=e^ae^b$




I've started by $e^a=sum _{n=0}^{infty }frac{a^n}{n!}$, Iwant to khow this is correct way?



Any help will be greatly appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question






















  • yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday












  • @Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
    – user62498
    yesterday












  • Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











Let $A$ be aBanach algebra




if $ab=ba$ then prove that $e^{a+b}=e^ae^b$




I've started by $e^a=sum _{n=0}^{infty }frac{a^n}{n!}$, Iwant to khow this is correct way?



Any help will be greatly appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question













Let $A$ be aBanach algebra




if $ab=ba$ then prove that $e^{a+b}=e^ae^b$




I've started by $e^a=sum _{n=0}^{infty }frac{a^n}{n!}$, Iwant to khow this is correct way?



Any help will be greatly appreciated.







banach-algebras






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share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked yesterday









user62498

1,882613




1,882613












  • yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday












  • @Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
    – user62498
    yesterday












  • Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday


















  • yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday












  • @Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
    – user62498
    yesterday












  • Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
    – Fakemistake
    yesterday
















yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
– Fakemistake
yesterday






yes, and then multiply it with $e^{b}$. Do you know how to multiply two convergent series? There’s a we’ll known formula
– Fakemistake
yesterday














@Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
– user62498
yesterday






@Dear Fakemistake, I think I have to youse Cachy formula
– user62498
yesterday














Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
– Fakemistake
yesterday




Correct it‘s Cauchy formula
– Fakemistake
yesterday










1 Answer
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Yes. Expand as power series, and you can rearrange the $a$'s and $b$'s because they commute (so $(a+b)^2=a^2+2ab+b^2$ for example), so you can pretend you are doing high-school maths with numbers. You might want to read about the BCH (Baker Campbell Hausdorff) expansion. A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it gets harder ...






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  • @DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
    – user62498
    yesterday











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote













Yes. Expand as power series, and you can rearrange the $a$'s and $b$'s because they commute (so $(a+b)^2=a^2+2ab+b^2$ for example), so you can pretend you are doing high-school maths with numbers. You might want to read about the BCH (Baker Campbell Hausdorff) expansion. A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it gets harder ...






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • @DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
    – user62498
    yesterday















up vote
1
down vote













Yes. Expand as power series, and you can rearrange the $a$'s and $b$'s because they commute (so $(a+b)^2=a^2+2ab+b^2$ for example), so you can pretend you are doing high-school maths with numbers. You might want to read about the BCH (Baker Campbell Hausdorff) expansion. A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it gets harder ...






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • @DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
    – user62498
    yesterday













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









Yes. Expand as power series, and you can rearrange the $a$'s and $b$'s because they commute (so $(a+b)^2=a^2+2ab+b^2$ for example), so you can pretend you are doing high-school maths with numbers. You might want to read about the BCH (Baker Campbell Hausdorff) expansion. A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it gets harder ...






share|cite|improve this answer












Yes. Expand as power series, and you can rearrange the $a$'s and $b$'s because they commute (so $(a+b)^2=a^2+2ab+b^2$ for example), so you can pretend you are doing high-school maths with numbers. You might want to read about the BCH (Baker Campbell Hausdorff) expansion. A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it gets harder ...







share|cite|improve this answer












share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer










answered yesterday









Richard Martin

1,3938




1,3938












  • @DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
    – user62498
    yesterday


















  • @DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
    – user62498
    yesterday
















@DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
– user62498
yesterday




@DRichard Martinear , please explain a little more about, A slightly harder result holds when $a$ and $b$ both commute with their commutator $[a,b]$, and if that fails then it
– user62498
yesterday


















 

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