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Roots of Unity (1 Viewer)

shimmerz_777

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i dont remember studying them, i think that they popped up in the 1999 HSC exam paper q 7 or 8, any pointers on what they are/ how to use them cause i cant see them in my text book. thanks
 

ianc

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Roots of unity are simply where z<sup>[FONT=&quot]n[/FONT]</sup> = 1


They appear in the complex numbers topic and also in polynomials


To find the roots:
  • z=r<sup>[FONT=&quot]1/n [/FONT]</sup>cis[1/n(2kπ)] for all k from 0 to (n-1)
    OR
  • [FONT=&quot]Use polynomial stuff[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]
[/FONT]Just a few handy things to bear in mind when doing questions involving them:
  • All the roots have a modulus of 1, hence they lie on a circle of radius 1
  • They are all separated by the same argument on the Argand diagram
  • If n is even, then two roots are real (ie [FONT=&quot]±[/FONT]1)
  • If n is odd, then only one root is real (ie 1)
  • The roots occur in conjugate pairs (eg if one root is a+bi, then the other will be a-bi)
  • The roots occur in the following pattern: 1,w<sup>[FONT=&quot]2[/FONT]</sup>,w<sup>[FONT=&quot]3[/FONT]</sup><sup></sup>...w<sup>[FONT=&quot]n-1[/FONT]</sup> (where w is the root with the smallest arg>0)
  • 1+w+w<sup>[FONT=&quot]2[/FONT]</sup>w<sup>[FONT=&quot]3[/FONT]</sup>+...+w<sup>[FONT=&quot]n-1[/FONT]</sup> = 0
 

Riviet

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bboyelement said:
sum of roots i think ... where its -b/a and b should always be 0 for root of unity
Yep, that's the quickest and easiest way to prove it.
 

Sober

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bboyelement said:
sum of roots i think ... where its -b/a and b should always be 0 for root of unity
Wow, I was not aware of such a simple proof, thankyou.
 

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