Siva Subramanian Posted January 29, 2017 Posted January 29, 2017 How can a combination of a complex and a real number be plotted in a single graph ? How about merging the Argand and Cartesion planes in perpendicular orientation?
DrKrettin Posted January 29, 2017 Posted January 29, 2017 Just use an Argand diagram and take every real number as a complex number with a zero imaginary part, i.e. somewhere on the x axis.
wtf Posted January 29, 2017 Posted January 29, 2017 (edited) Not sure what you mean by a combination -- sum, product, ordered pair? But a complex function [math]f(z) = w[/math] maps the [math]z[/math]-plane to the [math]w[/math]-plane. So the graph lives in 4-space. What's often done is to show nice color pictures of the real or imaginary parts of a complex function. Here's a page I found but these kinds of pictures are all over the Web. http://www.geom.uiuc.edu/~banchoff/script/CFGExp.html Edited January 29, 2017 by wtf
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