MiseryParade
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2011
- Messages
- 155
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2013
"use the vector representation of z1 and z2 on an argand diagram to show that if |z1| = |z2|, then (z1+z2)/(z1-z2) is imaginary."
I have no idea. :/ This is what I tried to do: arg(z1+z2)/arg(z1-z2) = arg (2*z2). I drew the diagram so that z1 and z2 were reflections of each other centred around the imaginary axis, with equal arguments of 45, so that when arg (2*z2), it'd be arg(90), which is on the imaginary axis...
Could someone point me in the right direction? I don't know how to approach questions like these, and there aren't any available answers since it was a "show" question.
Are there any 4U textbooks that have worked solutions to all questions, including proofing?
I have no idea. :/ This is what I tried to do: arg(z1+z2)/arg(z1-z2) = arg (2*z2). I drew the diagram so that z1 and z2 were reflections of each other centred around the imaginary axis, with equal arguments of 45, so that when arg (2*z2), it'd be arg(90), which is on the imaginary axis...
Could someone point me in the right direction? I don't know how to approach questions like these, and there aren't any available answers since it was a "show" question.
Are there any 4U textbooks that have worked solutions to all questions, including proofing?