The complex sine and cosine extend the real sine and cosine to all of , defined via Euler’s formula / the Complex exponential:
Both are entire (analytic on all of ) — combinations of the entire function .
Derivatives and identities
Standard rules carry over:
Sum and difference formulas, double-angle formulas — all unchanged from the real case. Plug in complex wherever you’d plug in real .
Real-imaginary decomposition
Using together with and (proved by substitution into the definitions):
Memorize these — they’re how you compute or in practice. The and factors are what cause the unboundedness.
Unbounded on
A crucial difference from the real case: and are unbounded on . Along the imaginary axis :
As , both and blow up exponentially. So and grow without bound on horizontal strips of large .
This is exactly why and are non-constant despite being entire — the contrapositive of Liouville’s theorem, which says bounded entire functions are constant. Sin and cos are entire but not bounded, so they get to be non-constant.
Zeros
The zeros are the same as in the real case:
- iff , .
- iff , .
Proof: iff iff iff iff . Same for cosine.
So complex sine and cosine have only real zeros — even though their values elsewhere are complex.
In context
Complex sine and cosine show up:
- In contour integrals: is handled by replacing and taking the real part, then closing the contour in the upper half-plane (using Jordan’s lemma).
- As entire-but-unbounded examples illustrating Liouville’s theorem.
- In differential equations whose solutions are sinusoidal; the complex form unifies cosine-and-sine-shifted solutions.
Relationship to hyperbolic functions
Substituting swaps sin/cos with sinh/cosh:
So and along the imaginary axis become and along the real axis — and vice versa. The two function pairs are really one pair, rotated . See Complex hyperbolic functions.