In mathematics, the quantum dilogarithm is a special function defined by the formula

It is the same as the q-exponential function
.
Let
be "q-commuting variables", that is elements of a suitable noncommutative algebra satisfying Weyl's relation
. Then, the quantum dilogarithm satisfies Schützenberger's identity

Faddeev-Volkov's identity

and Faddeev-Kashaev's identity

The latter is known to be a quantum generalization of Rogers' five term dilogarithm identity.
Faddeev's quantum dilogarithm
is defined by the following formula:

where the contour of integration
goes along the real axis outside a small neighborhood of the origin and deviates into the upper half-plane near the origin. The same function can be described by the integral formula of Woronowicz:

Ludvig Faddeev discovered the quantum pentagon identity:

where
and
are self-adjoint (normalized) quantum mechanical momentum and position operators satisfying Heisenberg's commutation relation
![{\displaystyle [{\hat {p}},{\hat {q}}]={\frac {1}{2\pi i}}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/e71e24a7c98978b62e4b3e1bd607a4b96993c8f5)
and the inversion relation

The quantum dilogarithm finds applications in mathematical physics, quantum topology, cluster algebra theory.
The precise relationship between the q-exponential and
is expressed by the equality

valid for
.
References
External links