kaz1
et tu
Just wondering how mathematicians came up with this cause you can't multiply a number an imaginary number of times (at least I think so). Is there a proof or is it just an axiom or something?
Fixed.e^x = 1+x+x^2/2! + x^3/3! + x^4/4! .....x^n/n! ...
but what does it actually "mean" to differentiate a complex number? how do we justify this?There is a nice proof on Wikipedia that only uses differentiation. I'm wondering if the OP had the same concern when they were multiplying negative numbers? "You can't multiply a number a negative number of times ..."
The derivative of a complex valued function is defined similarly to the real valued case: Let f be a real valued function. The the derivative of f at the point z0 is given by:but what does it actually "mean" to differentiate a complex number? how do we justify this?
(just raising some q's for discussion)
nah its alright, covered left/right hand limits in my uni math courseThe derivative of a complex valued function is defined similarly to the real valued case: Let f be a real valued function. The the derivative of f at the point z0 is given by:
The only subtle difference is that the limit must be allowed to approach z0 from any direction. Recall, in the real case a limit can approach from the left or right, whereas in the complex plane the limit must exist when approaching from any direction. I can flesh this out a bit more if you need, since I don't think left and right hand limits are covered in the HSC (though they should be).
The derivative of any complex number (say i) is still 0. Intuitively you would expect this since a constant is ... well, constant.