Klaynos Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 have you tried MathWorld? Wikipedia or any other encyclopedia? But, seriously, I have my doubts that there could ever be a "one place" where you could have everything. I mean, just on this one topic of imaginary numbers (complex analysis), there are several multi-hundred page books listed as still being in print on Amazon.com. Add to that all the journal articles and out of print texts on complex analysis, and we're talking hundreds of thousands of pages. And, all that on just one small part of mathematics. Collecting it all together is probably an impossible task. I've heard of these nearly magical rooms which are filled with thousands of books and quiet people... I'm not sure I believe these myths though
alan2here Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 n is a complex number and equals (2, 3) o is a complex number and equals n times by n what does o equal?
D H Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 (2,3) is not a complex number. It is a point in R2. [math]n=2+3i[/math] is a complex number, and [math]n^2=4+2*2*3i+(3i)^2=-5+12i[/math]
alan2here Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 so a complex number with the real part as 2 and the imaginary part as 3 is written as [math]n = 2 + 3i[/math] What does the 4 represent in [math]n^2=4+2*2...[/math]?
Bignose Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 I've heard of these nearly magical rooms which are filled with thousands of books and quiet people... I'm not sure I believe these myths though Ah, but no library has "everything" and even then, the information about complex analysis would be spread around in many different books and journals. It isn't all collected into one single spot. It's an impossible task, I tell ya.
Kyrisch Posted July 11, 2008 Posted July 11, 2008 so a complex number with the real part as 2 and the imaginary part as 3 is written as[math]n = 2 + 3i[/math] What does the 4 represent in [math]n^2=4+2*2...[/math]? That's [math](a+b)^2 =a^2 + 2ab + b^2[/math] so [math] (2+3i)^2 = 2^2 + 2 * (2*3i) + (3i)^2[/math]. The 4 is the [math]2^2[/math].
ajb Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 (2,3) is not a complex number. It is a point in R2. [math]n=2+3i[/math] is a complex number, and [math]n^2=4+2*2*3i+(3i)^2=-5+12i[/math] [math]\mathbb{C} \cong \mathbb{R}^{2}[/math] So all alan2here was asking was can you multiply complex numbers (essentially). Yes, of course as shown by the earlier posts.
alan2here Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 (edited) Actually I was looking for the method also. TY for the equations. Edit: Oh, how can [math]n^2=4+2*2*3i+(3i)^2=-5+12i[/math] You're using add, times and power on positive numbers. How can a negative number be created for the real part? Edited July 12, 2008 by alan2here
insane_alien Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 i^2 is negative 1 remember. so (3i)^2 is the same as 9*-1 which is -9. -9+4 = -5 it all works out if you just use foil
alan2here Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 Foil, looks useful. Where N is a complex number the real part of [math]n^2=4+r*r*(i*-3)[/math] Is this right, and what is the equation for the imaginary part?
Kyrisch Posted July 12, 2008 Posted July 12, 2008 (edited) Foil, looks useful. Where N is a complex number the real part of [math]n^2=4+r*r*(i*-3)[/math] Is this right, and what is the equation for the imaginary part? No. The formula for the square of a binomial expression is [math](a+b)^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2[/math]. If you're working with an imaginary number [math]n^2=(a,b)^2=(a+bi)^2=a^2+2\* a\* b\* i + (bi)^2[/math]. The new real part would be [math]a^2+ (bi)^2=a^2-b^2[/math] and the imaginary part would be [math] 2\*a\*b\*i[/math]. Your main mistake is that the real part is only factored in once, it is an unfortunate that the example you gave had [math]a=2[/math] so [math] 2\*a\*b[/math] became ambiguous. Your second mistake seems to be a lapse in understanding of the relationship between [math](a,b)[/math] and [math](a+bi)[/math] as well as what FOIL (poduct of the First two numbers plus product of the Outside two numbers plus product of the Inside two numbers plus product of the Last two numbers) and how it simplifies to the square of a binomial formula due to the identity [math](a+b)^2 = (a+b)\*(a+b)[/math]. Edited July 13, 2008 by Kyrisch
alan2here Posted July 14, 2008 Posted July 14, 2008 (edited) Thanks Please note that the following is case sensitive So to put it another way [math]n[/math] = complex number [math]i[/math] = imaginary part of [math]n[/math] [math]r[/math] = real part of [math]n[/math] [math]n = n ^ 2[/math] To do this I must [math]R = r ^ 2 - i ^ 2[/math] [math]I = 2 * r * i[/math] [math]r = R[/math] [math]i = I[/math] And it works :¬) Edited July 14, 2008 by alan2here
shanpeter Posted July 15, 2008 Posted July 15, 2008 Is any relationships between Human Body and Numbers ?
Klaynos Posted July 15, 2008 Posted July 15, 2008 Is any relationships between Human Body and Numbers ? What do you mean? On a simple level your pulse can be written as a number...
shanpeter Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 (edited) I mean Numerology! Edited July 18, 2008 by Cap'n Refsmmat
ajb Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 I mean Numerology! As a science forum I am not sure we are that interested in numerology. Either way, this thread is not the place to discuss this.
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