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Posted

First off, mornin' ladies and gentlemen of Science Forums. I'm currently an AP Calculus student, and I've noticed that the College Board curriculum for calculus is kept strictly to real numbers.

So that got me wondering: can you have imaginary calculus? I would guess that the answer is yes; if so, are the rules the same as real calculus?

 

I did some messing around with f(z) = (z + zi). I haven't done anything with imaginary numbers for a while, but I think the graph of this would be a vector with a constant slope i? (Can you take slopes on the imaginary plane like a linear function?) I tried to find a derivative of z+zi that equaled i and found that if I took the derivative of zi over the derivative of z (zi's derivative being i; z's derivative being 1) I get i. So I did this like a parametric.

 

Is any of this correct?

 

Thanks,

N

Posted

If you consider i to be a constant, and you can do calculus with constants, then you should have no trouble doing calculus with imaginary numbers.

Posted

Plus (although I know this is slightly different to what the OP is asking) they're sometimes unavoidable when it comes to solving differential equations.

Posted

for a complex function to be differentiable on an open set i believe to has to satisfy the Cauchy Riemann equations. du/dy= -dv/dw (partial dirivatives)

Posted
If you consider i to be a constant, and you can do calculus with constants, then you should have no trouble doing calculus with imaginary numbers.

 

That's what I was thinking. I would treat i as a constant(after all, it is :P).

Posted

There is a whole extension -- Find a good "Complex Analysis" book and you'll see that there is quite a lot in addition to just the calculus of real variables.

Posted

Complex Analysis is not that simple... deals withs residues and poles etc and criteria for functions that are analytical... if u treat z as a real constant u are missing a whole lot. Good luck...

Posted
Complex Analysis is not that simple... deals withs residues and poles etc and criteria for functions that are analytical... if u treat z as a real constant u are missing a whole lot. Good luck...

 

I'm kind of confused by this response because who said complex analysis was simple and who said to treat z as a constant? i is a constant, but obviously not z = x + yi. :confused:

 

Furthermore, I agree completely with what Snail wrote... especially in light of your last post where you actually used u as a variable! Though you didn't define what u, v, y, or w was...

Posted

my point was that complex analysis deals with many different topics that the poster ignoring and is worth learning more about. ie residues , poles etc


Merged post follows:

Consecutive posts merged

f(z) = u(x,y) + iv(x,y) for those math guys so apply Cauchy riemann equations to that....

Posted

Complex analysis is in a way a lot easier than real analysis. Many colleges teach complex analysis before real analysis for this very reason.

Posted
my point was that complex analysis deals with many different topics that the poster ignoring and is worth learning more about. ie residues , poles etc


Merged post follows:

Consecutive posts merged

f(z) = u(x,y) + iv(x,y) for those math guys so apply Cauchy riemann equations to that....

 

OK, that's fine, but again no one wrote that it was easy or to treat z as a constant, so it was kind of a weird response to the thread.

 

Also, you still didn't actually define what w was. I'm sure it was a typo (since it doesn't really make any sense), but it is still bad form to just leave any variables undefined -- especially as the OP is an obvious beginner. At least link to a source with more complete information, like linking to: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Cauchy-RiemannEquations.html

Might be nice to say a word or two about them (like, C-R equations come from differentiating a complex function f(z) with respect to z = x + yi i.e. with respect to dz = dx + dyi.

 

Finally, this forum does have a LaTeX capability that will make the math easier to write and read: a la

 

[math]\frac{\partial u}{\partial x} = \frac{\partial v}{\partial y}[/math] and

[math]\frac{\partial u}{\partial y} = -\frac{\partial v}{\partial x}[/math]

 

much nicer looking than trying to write out "partial derivatives" where necessary and write the fractions using only ()'s and the / key.

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