U Utility Member Joined May 14, 2012 Messages 36 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 21, 2013 #1 If w1 = -√3 + i is a cube root of z. Find z. Is there any quick method to getting the original angle (arg(z))? I don’t understand that part, in particular.
If w1 = -√3 + i is a cube root of z. Find z. Is there any quick method to getting the original angle (arg(z))? I don’t understand that part, in particular.
A Autistic Chimp New Member Joined Mar 18, 2013 Messages 5 Gender Male HSC N/A Mar 21, 2013 #2 It has been a while since I did complex, but if (-√3+i)^3 = z, then z = 8i when you expand it, therefore arg(z)=pi/2. That's about 4 lines of working.
It has been a while since I did complex, but if (-√3+i)^3 = z, then z = 8i when you expand it, therefore arg(z)=pi/2. That's about 4 lines of working.
U Utility Member Joined May 14, 2012 Messages 36 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Mar 21, 2013 #3 Yeah, pi / 2. I started doubting it after doing so many of them.
RealiseNothing what is that?It is Cowpea Joined Jul 10, 2011 Messages 4,591 Location Sydney Gender Male HSC 2013 Mar 21, 2013 #4 Cubing this, using De Moivre's Theorem, we will cube the modulus and multiply the argument by 3: (note we just subtracted so it doesn't change anything). Last edited: Mar 21, 2013
Cubing this, using De Moivre's Theorem, we will cube the modulus and multiply the argument by 3: (note we just subtracted so it doesn't change anything).
Nws m8 Banned Joined Oct 21, 2012 Messages 494 Gender Male HSC 2012 Uni Grad 2018 Mar 22, 2013 #5 RealiseNothing said: Cubing this, using De Moivre's Theorem, we will cube the modulus and multiply the argument by 3: (note we just subtracted so it doesn't change anything). Click to expand... That's the right and quickest method, I think they teach you this method at school, don't they? ...
RealiseNothing said: Cubing this, using De Moivre's Theorem, we will cube the modulus and multiply the argument by 3: (note we just subtracted so it doesn't change anything). Click to expand... That's the right and quickest method, I think they teach you this method at school, don't they? ...