Cube Roots of Unity HELP! (1 Viewer)

megan09

New Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2008
Messages
24
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
HI I’m in desperate need of help!
I can’t seem to understand the concept of cube roots of unity. Can someone please show me how to attempt the following question:
If Z is one of the three cube roots of unity, find the two possible values of z^2 + z + 1 .
I tried using the formula:
Z = nthroot(r) [cos(t/n + 2kPi/n) + isin(t/n + 2kPi/n)] and found the three roots and substituted each one into z^2 + z + 1. BUT firstly I got 3 answers when they wanted 2 and none of them matched the answers in the back of the book!
What should I do??
Any help would be appreciated
 
F

fuckit1991

Guest
going on from shunning's idea, why don't you use the quadratic formula to get the two values since now you know it is equal to 0. You'll get both complex roots.

z=(-1 (plus minus)iroot3) over 2
 
Last edited by a moderator:

shuning

Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2008
Messages
654
Location
Central Coast - Chatswood all the way :p
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
normally in a question like this, it should say z is a complex root of unity therefore when we have (z-1)(z^2+z+1)=0 we are sure it's (z^2+z+1)=0 not (z-1)=0

maybe there are other ways to do this question
 

megan09

New Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2008
Messages
24
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
hi thanks for replying so fast!
i tried both of these methods, i understand equating it to 0 but i'm not sure of where they are getting 3
 

roadrage75

Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2007
Messages
107
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
formula? there isnt really a formula....

z^3 = 1
z^3 - 1 = 0
(z-1)(z^2+z+1)=0
therefore (z^2+z+1) = 0
is this 1 of the answers?
i'd say so...

notice there're not asking you to find out all the cube roots of unity. They're asking you to find the possible values for

z^2 + z + 1, given that z is a cube root of unity

as shuning said, z^3 = 1. therefore, (z-1)(z^2 + z + 1) = 0

so either z = 1 --> z^2 + z + 1 = 3

or z^2 + z + 1 = 0 (who cares what z is, the question doesnt ask for this)

therefore, z^2 + z + 1 = 3 or 0.
 
Last edited:

roadrage75

Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2007
Messages
107
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
just wondering, i understand y it equals to 0, but why 3?

can you understand how I got to this step:

(z-1)(z^2 +z + 1) = 0


now z = 1 satifies this equation, right? (this makes sense as 1 is one of the three cubic roots of 1)

if z = 1, z^2 + z + 1 = 3 (by mere substitution)

the only other way (z-1)(z^2 +z + 1) can = 0 is if z^2 + z + 1 = 0 itself
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top