selablad said:
Sorry, I don't think this is in the right forum, but I don't know which to put it in anyway so...
Anyway, my maths teacher was telling us about how, when you're drawing normal numbers you put them on a number line, and how for complex numbers you plot them on a graph-looking thing (like with 2 axes). So my friend and I were wondering, what are the numbers that need to be plotted on 3 axes called, if you can even do this, and how do you get them? I mean you get complex numbers from i^2 = -1 so how do you get 3D ones?
I'm sorry if this is a really obvious question, I was just curious
Something not to be confused about
:
Imaginary numbers: multiples of i (as you said the square root of negative 1)
Complex numbers: A number of the form z (<- called complex number) = a + ib
Where a and b are real numbers, and i is (-1)^1/2
e.g z= 5 +9i
z= pi - ei
A complex number as you can see has a Real part (the a ) and an imaginary part (the bi).
The imaginary part is graphed as the 'y axis' and the real part is graphed as the x axis.
So a complex number is made up of 2 parts. Real and imaginary. 2 axes.
If I understand your qs correctly, there is no '3D' number, as this woul d involve a number with a real component, an imaginary component, and some other form of numbering that doesn't exist. Its also important to see that we only graph a complex number to help put it in polar form, it doesn't really have a 'dimension'.
You can create a space with complex dimensions though. The cartesian plane is a space with 2 dimensions , one dimension is real, the other dimension is real and perp to the first. or 3 dimensions, one x one y one z, all perp. 4 spatial dimensions, graphically, is purely theoretical.
You can create a complex space with one dimension complex, and another dimension complex. Bit silly though, not useful in real world. Again theoretical.
Too add a final word, as I said we only graph complex numbers because they have 2 components. I suppose if you wanted to draw an analogy you could graph a real number in 2 dimensions as well. Have your x axis represent integer vaules 1, 2, 3 ,4 ,5... and your y dimension represent decimal places or 'fractions of integers. Thus 4.782 would be made up of 2 components, 4 ('x axis') and .782 which could be in the 'y axis'