ty haha. heres another....
how would u solve z^2 + 2z(1+2i)- (11+2i)=0
ty haha. heres another....
how would u solve z^2 + 2z(1+2i)- (11+2i)=0
Should be -12 under the square root sign in the fourth line
and then proceed as usual.
I have a horrible feeling that I made an arithmetic error somewhere, I'm not feeling too well today heh.
Theres a slightly quicker way to solve than using these simultatenous equations that our class got taught.(a+ib)^2=9 +40i
a^2 - b^2 + 2abi = 9 + 40i
Therefore a^2 - b^2 = 9 and 2ab = 40 (by equating real values and imaginary values)
So use a^2 - b^2 = 9 and ab = 20 to solve for a and b simultaneously
Yeah, there is actually.There is no errors in my solution is there Jetblack?
shit, yeah fixed, i usually right PSF, just done it straight off computer. thanks for that, it will just yeild the wrong solutions for a and b, but overall answer would be the same.Yeah, there is actually.
When you factorise the quartic in 'a', you mix up the signs of the factors - they should be +4 and -36. I haven't resubstituted my answers back into the original equation, but I'm pretty sure that will yield the right answers.