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little help... (1 Viewer)

routemarker

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can anyone here show the working for the questions below and how to do them

1) express all solutions of z^6-64 as a product of real linear/irreducible quadratic factors

2) express z^5 +1 as a product of linear factors. complex numbers can be left in polar form.

cheers:)
 

McLake

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Originally posted by routemarker
can anyone here show the working for the questions below and how to do them

1) express all solutions of z^6-64 as a product of real linear/irreducible quadratic factors

2) express z^5 +1 as a product of linear factors. complex numbers can be left in polar form.

cheers:)
Are you doing the MATH1131/1141 algebra test tommorow? I think so ...

1)
z^6 = 64
|z| = 2
6@ = 0 , +/- 2pi, +/- 4pi, +/-6pi
@ = 0, +/-(pi/3), +/-(2pi/3), pi
so solutions are 2, 2e^(pi*i/3), 2e^(-pi*i/3) ...

and then factorise:

(z +/- pi)(z^2 + 4cos(2pi/3) + 4)(z^2 + 4cos(4pi/3) + 4)


2)
z^5 = -1
|z| = 1
5@ = +/- pi, +/- 2pi, +/- 4pi
@ = +/-(pi/5), +/-(2pi/5), (4pi/5)
so solutions are e^(pi*i/5) ....

and factorise:

(z - e^(4pi*i/5))(z^2 + 2cos(pi/5) + 1)(z^2 + 2cos(2pi/5) + 1)
 
Last edited:
N

ND

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Re: Re: little help...

Originally posted by McLake


Are you doing the MATH1131/1141 algebra test tommorow? I think so ...

1)
z^6 = 64
|z| = 2
6@ = 0 , +/- 2pi, +/- 4pi, +/-6pi
@ = 0, +/-(pi/3), +/-(2pi/3), pi
so solutions are 2, 2e^(pi*i/3), 2e^(-pi*i/3) ...

and then factorise:

(z +/- pi)(z^2 + 4cos(2pi/3) + 4)(z^2 + 4cos(4pi/3) + 4)


2)
z^5 = -1
|z| = 1
5@ = +/- pi, +/- 2pi, +/- 4pi
@ = +/-(pi/5), +/-(2pi/5), (4pi/5)
so solutions are e^(pi*i/5) ....

and factorise:

(z - e^(4pi*i/5))(z^2 + 2cos(pi/5) + 1)(z^2 + 2cos(2pi/5) + 1)
Just a q: Why did you use euler's identity to convert the soln's to exponents?
 

McLake

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Re: Re: Re: little help...

Originally posted by ND


Just a q: Why did you use euler's identity to convert the soln's to exponents?
Because that's how we do it at uni (and I'm sure routemarker was asking these as uni questions)
 

maniacguy

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in this case, easier is:
z^6 - 64
= (z^3 - 8)(z^3 + 8)
= (z-2)(z^2 + 2z+4)(z+2)(z^2-2z+4)

for the first one.

If you can see difference of squares / cubes factorization, then use it!
 

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