Definition of 0^0: What Does it Mean?

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The discussion centers on the definition of 0^0, with participants debating whether it should be defined as 1 or considered undefined. Many mathematicians prefer to define 0^0 as 1 for convenience in applications like combinatorics and power series, while others argue it remains an indeterminate form similar to 0/0. The limits involved in evaluating 0^0 can yield different results depending on the approach taken, leading to confusion. Ultimately, while 0^0 is often treated as 1 for practical purposes, it is recognized as indeterminate in strict mathematical contexts. The conversation highlights the balance between utility and mathematical rigor in defining 0^0.
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i was wondering how 0^0 is defined? can anybody please help?

thanks in advance.
 
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Please can we not start a very long thread on this one? If people want to see the debates on it then search the forums.

Simply put the most logical definition of 0^0 is that it is equal to 1. This makes 'everything work' without having to make any 'except for 0 when it FOO is equal to 1' statements: partitions, functions, combinatorics, taylor series etc.
 
It isn't. It's an undefined statement like 0/0.

However, a lot of mathematicians like to set it equal to one, but it's really a matter of convenience. So be careful of this one.
 
I, and most people, define it to be 0^0.
Why? Because it is useful for dealing with infinite series.


But some people do not define it. And what I hate is when a person tells me he does not define it but when he writes the power series he completely overlooks 0^0

The same way we define 0!=1 (but there is actually another reason there).
 
We can also define in terms of the continuity of the function x^0 or x^x, or (x+x)^x or whatever you want.
 
The reason we define 0!=1 has very little relation to this..How many ways can we arrange nothing Kummer? Or if you want, you could take the recursive definition of the factorial function, n!= n\cdot (n-1)! and substituting n=1 gives the desired result.

The reason 0^0 remains undefined is because the limit that represents it does not actually converge. Of course we could somewhat cheat by making some assumptions, eg say that it is the limit:
\lim_{x^{+}\to 0} x^x, and that is equal to 1, but we assume that the Base and the exponent approach zero at the same rate.

The correct limit is actually:
\lim_{x\to 0 , y\to 0} x^y, which is multi valued.
 
Kummer said:
I, and most people, define it to be 0^0.
Why? Because it is useful for dealing with infinite series.

What do you mean "define it to be 0^0"? Did you mean to say "define it to be 1"?
 
now i am really confused. is 0^0 = 1 or not?
 
  • #10
HallsofIvy said:
What do you mean "define it to be 0^0"? Did you mean to say "define it to be 1"?

Thank you.

Gib Z said:
The reason we define 0!=1 has very little relation to this..How many ways can we arrange nothing Kummer?

Yes, that is true. But that does not constitute a formal mathematical proof. The problem is that there is no proof and it is a matter of taste. My preference along with most people is to define it as 1 because it is useful in power series.

Another reason is that the Gamma function evaluated at 1 is equal to 1, and that is a generalization of a factorial. But that is another story.
 
  • #11
murshid_islam said:
now i am really confused. is 0^0 = 1 or not?

No, it is an "indeterminate"- like 0/0, if you replace the "x" value in a limit by, say, 0 and get 0^0 the limit itself might have several different values.

To take two obvious examples, if f(x)= x0, then f(0)= 00. For any positive x, f(x)= x0= 1 so the limit as x goes to 0 is 1. If we want to make this a continuous function, we would have to "define" 00= 1.

However, if f(x)= 0x we again have f(0)= 00 but for any positive x, f(x)= 0x= 0 which has limit 0 as x goes to 0. If we want to make this a continuous function, we would have to "define" 00= 0.
 
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  • #12
thanks a lot, HallsofIvy. that made it pretty clear to me.
 
  • #13
It might be still clearer now that I have edited it to say what I meant!
 
  • #14
HallsofIvy said:
It might be still clearer now that I have edited it to say what I meant!
yeah it's clear. 00 cannot be equal to both 0 and 1. so that's why it is indeterminate. am i right?
 
  • #15
murshid_islam said:
yeah it's clear. 00 cannot be equal to both 0 and 1. so that's why it is indeterminate. am i right?

Yes. Actually, it is possible to alter the limits slightly so as to get ANY number.
 
  • #16
Come on people. It is not that 0^0 can be '0 and 1', but that a certain limit, x^y as x and y tend to 0 can be made to be arbitrary. That doesn't say what 0^0 is, just that the function f(x,y)=x^y has a nasty singularity at (0,0). But the symbol 0^0 has a perfectly well understood commonly accepted value as 1 for many other uses.
 
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