Skip to main content
1 of 4

Lectures on the Theory of Elliptic Functions, by Harris Hancock

I'm working on Example 4, page 262, of Harris Hancock's book which reads: Prove that 1/(sn(iu,k))^2 + 1/(sn(u,k))^2 = 1. I can only get this result if sn(u,k)=sn(u,k'), where k' is the complimentary modulus of k. But that does not make sense.