GeorgesBorges
Member
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2007
- Messages
- 38
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2007
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Of course you can do it.Yup, calculus works in the complex field as well =)
treat "i" as just any algebraic constant.
There's a fundamental flaw to this question.Yup, calculus works in the complex field as well =)
treat "i" as just any algebraic constant.
I think we had a discussion on this somewhere before - the question clearly demonstrates that HSC maths is essentially harmful as the only thing it teaches people is to mindlessly apply rewrite rules to formal expressions without any understanding whatsoever.There's a fundamental flaw to this question.
Remember you don't have a definition for e^z where z is complex. Which means that you will either need an explicit defintion for e^z to define the derivative or you can define exp(z) to be a function such that d/dz exp(z) = exp(z)
Yeah. That's how i would've done it.how about:
let y = cosx + isinx
a)show that dy/dx = iy
b)hence show that y = e^ix
does this make the same sort of assumption?
ok I should have stated that my assumption is that -π ≤ x ≤ π, because you need that to prove the proof. I have used these and understand the theory so my intuition knew what to expect but really the flaw to this proof is not giving x a restriction of values, but, you don't need to as e^-ix always has a magnitude of 1, but, by arriving at that conclusion you would have to assume that the proof you are proving is true! Unless I haven't looked at this from a different perspective where you can achieve that f(x) = 1 no matter what!a)
but if |cos(x) + isin(x)| = 1 and -π ≤ x ≤ π => |e^-ix| = 1