Grey Council
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- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 1,426
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- Male
- HSC
- 2004
Here goes. As i said, i've just started 4u maths, and the complex numbers topic seems crazy to me. heehee, maybe i'm just shit.
Anyway, here is the question. Its question 5, from exercise 2.1 of the cambridge textbook. As you can see, i'm stuck fairly early on.
let m = theta (that wierd greek sign)
let n = theta bar (thera with that bar thing on top)
am^2 + bm + c = 0, where a, b, c, are real and x is a complex number. Show that an^2 + bn + c = 0
Deduce that if m is a non-real root of ax^2 + bx + c = 0, where a, b and c are real, then n is the other root of this quadratic equation.
I dont know how to approach this. That why i was after the worked solutions. I mean, what Dr Buchanan said is true, but how am i supposed to go about doing a question i dont know how to approach? Usually i'd ask a teacher, but i dont have a teacher over the holidays.
Anyway, here is the question. Its question 5, from exercise 2.1 of the cambridge textbook. As you can see, i'm stuck fairly early on.
let m = theta (that wierd greek sign)
let n = theta bar (thera with that bar thing on top)
am^2 + bm + c = 0, where a, b, c, are real and x is a complex number. Show that an^2 + bn + c = 0
Deduce that if m is a non-real root of ax^2 + bx + c = 0, where a, b and c are real, then n is the other root of this quadratic equation.
I dont know how to approach this. That why i was after the worked solutions. I mean, what Dr Buchanan said is true, but how am i supposed to go about doing a question i dont know how to approach? Usually i'd ask a teacher, but i dont have a teacher over the holidays.