Three subfields of the
complex numbers have been suggested as encoding the notion of a "closed-form number"; in increasing order of generality, these are the Liouvillian numbers (not to be confused with
Liouville numbers in the sense of rational approximation), EL numbers and
elementary numbers. The
Liouvillian numbers, denoted , form the smallest
algebraically closed subfield of closed under exponentiation and logarithm (formally, intersection of all such subfields)—that is, numbers which involve
explicit exponentiation and logarithms, but allow explicit and
implicit polynomials (roots of polynomials); this is defined in . was originally referred to as
elementary numbers, but this term is now used more broadly to refer to numbers defined explicitly or implicitly in terms of algebraic operations, exponentials, and logarithms. A narrower definition proposed in , denoted , and referred to as
EL numbers, is the smallest subfield of closed under exponentiation and logarithm—this need not be algebraically closed, and corresponds to
explicit algebraic, exponential, and logarithmic operations. "EL" stands both for "exponential–logarithmic" and as an abbreviation for "elementary". Whether a number is a closed-form number is related to whether a number is
transcendental. Formally, Liouvillian numbers and elementary numbers contain the
algebraic numbers, and they include some but not all transcendental numbers. In contrast, EL numbers do not contain all algebraic numbers, but do include some transcendental numbers. Closed-form numbers can be studied via
transcendental number theory, in which a major result is the
Gelfond–Schneider theorem, and a major open question is
Schanuel's conjecture. == Numerical computations ==