Complex Numbers Help (1 Viewer)

someth1ng

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I've tried this question...



Is one root this:


If not, can someone give me a run through?
 
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nightweaver066

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Pretty long question..
The square roots are:


I'm not going to run through all the steps as it is troublesome.

From letting and after equating coefficients, you end up with:



Putting these two together by eliminating y, you end up with:


Applying the quadratic formula, you simplify to this:


As you need to square root this again, it must not be < 0, so you ignore



So
 

D94

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Why not leave it in/answer in mod-arg form?

 

someth1ng

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That seemed difficult - I just started this roots stuff...

I got the 2cis(-5pi/12) one - getting the other one now.

EDIT: Got the 2cis (7pi/12)...I was getting it right after all...LOL
 
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D94

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That seemed difficult - I just started this roots stuff...

I got the 2cis(-5pi/12) one - getting the other one now.

EDIT: Got the 2cis (7pi/12)...I was getting it right after all...LOL
Nice. Patel gives a decent explanation of complex roots (and complex numbers in general) so just follow the book for at least complex numbers.
 

someth1ng

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Nice. Patel gives a decent explanation of complex roots (and complex numbers in general) so just follow the book for at least complex numbers.
I haven't actually got the textbook yet - just the digital version - they didn't give me the answers to that specific exercise...I'm trying to keep ahead of everything.
So you're allowed to leave in mod-arg form?
 

D94

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I haven't actually got the textbook yet - just the digital version - they didn't give me the answers to that specific exercise...I'm trying to keep ahead of everything.
So you're allowed to leave in mod-arg form?
Oh right, makes sense.

Depends on the question. Sometimes it requires mod-arg, sometimes it requires x+iy. Because that question was a bit obscure, the other method of finding the roots probably wouldn't have suited it. (ie. equate real and imaginary parts to find x and y). But from what I've seen in the past papers, they'll ask for a mod-arg form, and then you need to evaluate the complex number raised to a high power, eg. 10, and then simplify that into x+iy.
 

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