The circle group shows up in a variety of forms in mathematics. We list some of the more common forms here. Specifically, we show that \mathbb T \cong \mbox{U}(1) \cong \R/\Z \cong \mathrm{SO}(2), where the slash () denotes
group quotient and \cong the existence of an
isomorphism between the groups. The set of all
unitary matrices coincides with the circle group; the unitary condition is equivalent to the condition that its element have absolute value 1. Therefore, the circle group is canonically isomorphic to the first
unitary group {{tmath|1= \mathrm{U}(1) }}, i.e., \mathbb T \cong \mbox{U}(1). The
exponential function gives rise to a map \exp : \R \to \mathbb T from the additive real numbers to the circle group known as
Euler's formula \theta \mapsto e^{i\theta} = \cos\theta + i \sin \theta, where \theta \in \mathbb{R} corresponds to the angle (in
radians) on the unit circle as measured counterclockwise from the positive
x-axis. The property e^{i\theta_1} e^{i\theta_2} = e^{i(\theta_1+\theta_2)}, \quad \forall \theta_1 ,\theta_2 \in \mathbb{R}, makes \exp : \R \to \mathbb T a
group homomorphism. While the map is
surjective, it is not
injective and therefore not an isomorphism. The
kernel of this map is the set of all
integer multiples of . By the
first isomorphism theorem we then have that \mathbb T \cong \R~\!/~\!2\pi\Z. After rescaling we can also say that \mathbb T is isomorphic to . The unit
complex numbers can be realized as 2×2 real
orthogonal matrices, i.e., e^{i\theta}= \cos\theta + i \sin \theta \leftrightarrow \begin{bmatrix} \cos \theta & -\sin \theta \\ \sin \theta & \cos \theta \\ \end{bmatrix} = f\bigl(e^{i\theta}\bigr), associating the
squared modulus and
complex conjugate with the
determinant and
transpose, respectively, of the corresponding matrix. As the
angle sum trigonometric identities imply that f\bigl(e^{i\theta_1} e^{i\theta_2}\bigr) = \begin{bmatrix} \cos(\theta_1 + \theta_2) & -\sin(\theta_1 + \theta_2) \\ \sin(\theta_1 + \theta_2) & \cos(\theta_1 + \theta_2) \end{bmatrix} = f\bigl(e^{i\theta_1}\bigr) \times f\bigl(e^{i\theta_2}\bigr), where \times is matrix multiplication, the circle group is
isomorphic to the
special orthogonal group \mathrm{SO}(2), i.e., \mathbb T \cong \mathrm{SO}(2). This isomorphism has the geometric interpretation that multiplication by a unit complex number is a proper rotation in the complex (and real) plane, and every such rotation is of this form. == Properties ==