Are polynomial functions with fractional exponents transcendental

definitionpolynomialsrational-functionstranscendental-functions

I'm having trouble categorizing fractional–order systems, that means functions like

$$ f(x) = K \cdot (1 + \sqrt{x})$$

or more generally, e.g.

$$ g(x) = \dfrac{a_0 + a_1 x^{1/2} + a_2 x^{1} + a_3 x^{3/2}}{b_0 + b_1 x^{1/2} + b_2 x^{1} + b_3 x^{3/2}}$$

where the exponents are rational numbers $\gamma \in \mathbb{Q}$. All coefficients and $K$ are real numbers. $x$ is, in my case, complex.

I doubt they can still be refered as rational functions, can they? But on the other hand, are these functions transcendental functions?

The definition on Wikipedia is not entirely clear to me on that matter:

A transcendental function is an analytic function that does not satisfy a polynomial equation, in contrast to an algebraic function.1[2] In other words, a transcendental function "transcends" algebra in that it cannot be expressed in terms of a finite sequence of the algebraic operations of addition, multiplication, and root extraction.


Would the definition change, if we include real exponents $\gamma \in \mathbb{R}$?

And what happens in case of the implicit form:

$$ h(x) = K \cdot \sqrt{1 + x}$$

I'm a little confused about all these definitions and I hope you can shed some light on my problem.

Best Answer

$$f(x)=1+\sqrt x$$ is algebraic because it satisfies the polynomial equation

$$(f(x)-1)^2-x=0.$$

Same goes with your function $g(x)$, though the polynomial will be of a much higher degree.

Transcendence begins with irrational exponents, as they would require a polynomial of infinite degree.

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