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Analytic and Harmonic Functions

The document discusses complex numbers. It begins by introducing complex numbers and how they can be represented as ordered pairs of real numbers. It then covers key topics such as: 1) The basic operations of addition and multiplication of complex numbers and how they relate to vectors. 2) Important properties of complex numbers including conjugates, inverses, and the binomial formula. 3) Representing complex numbers geometrically as vectors in the complex plane and defining the modulus or absolute value. 4) Inequalities involving sums, differences, and moduli of complex numbers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views

Analytic and Harmonic Functions

The document discusses complex numbers. It begins by introducing complex numbers and how they can be represented as ordered pairs of real numbers. It then covers key topics such as: 1) The basic operations of addition and multiplication of complex numbers and how they relate to vectors. 2) Important properties of complex numbers including conjugates, inverses, and the binomial formula. 3) Representing complex numbers geometrically as vectors in the complex plane and defining the modulus or absolute value. 4) Inequalities involving sums, differences, and moduli of complex numbers.

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ATC
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 54

Complex Numbers

V.Ramachandra prasad

1
 Textbook:
James Ward Brown, Ruel V. Churchill, Complex Variables and
Applications (the 8th ed.), China Machine Press, 2008

2
Numbers System

Natural Numbers Zero & Negative Numbers

Integers Fraction

Rational numbers Irrational numbers

Real numbers Imaginary numbers

Complex numbers

… More advanced number systems

Refer to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_system

3
Complex Numbers
 Sums and Products; Basic Algebraic Properties
 Further Properties; Vectors and Moduli
 Complex Conjugates; Exponential Form
 Products and Powers in Exponential Form
 Arguments of Products and Quotients
 Roots of Complex Numbers
 Regions in the Complex Plane

4
1. Sums and Products
 Definition
Complex numbers can be defined as ordered pairs (x, y)
of real numbers that are to be interpreted as points in the
complex plane

y
Note: The set of complex numbers
(x, y)
(0, y) Includes the real numbers as a subset

imaginary axis
Real axis

O (x, 0) x
Complex plane

5
1. Sums and Products

 Notation
It is customary to denote a complex number (x,y) by z,

x = Rez (Real part);


y y = Imz (Imaginary part)
z=(x, y)
(0, y) z1=z2 iff
1. Rez1= Rez2
2. Imz1 = Imz2

O (x, 0) x
Q: z1<z2?

6
1. Sums and Products

 Two Basic Operations


 Sum
(x1, y1) + (x2, y2) = (x1+x2, y1+y2)
 Product
(x1, y1) (x2, y2) = (x1x2 - y1y2, y1x2+x1y2)
1. when y1=0, y2=0, the above operations reduce to the usual operations of
addition and multiplication for real numbers.
2. Any complex number z= (x,y) can be written z = (x,0) + (0,y)
3. Let i be the pure imaginary number (0,1), then
z = x (1, 0) + y (0,1) = x + i y, x & y are real numbers

i2 =(0,1) (0,1) =(-1, 0)  i2=-1

7
1. Sums and Products

 Two Basic Operations (i2  -1)


 Sum
(x1, y1) + (x2, y2) = (x1+x2, y1+y2)
 (x1 + iy1) + (x2+ iy2) = (x1+x2)+i(y1+y2)

 Product
(x1, y1) (x2, y2) = (x1x2 - y1y2, y1x2+x1y2)
 (x1 + iy1) (x2+ iy2) = (x1x2+ x1 iy2) + (iy1x2 + i2 y1y2)
= (x1x2+ x1 iy2) + (iy1x2 - y1y2)
= (x1x2 - y1y2) +i(y1x2+x1y2)
8
2. Basic Algebraic Properties

 Various properties of addition and multiplication of


complex numbers are the same as for real numbers
 Commutative Laws
z1+ z2= z2 +z1, z1z2=z2z1

 Associative Laws
(z1+ z2 )+ z3 = z1+ (z2+z3)
(z1z2) z3 =z1 (z2z3)
e.g. Prove that z1z2=z2z1
(x1, y1) (x2, y2) = (x1x2 - y1y2, y1x2+x1y2) = (x2x1 - y2y1, y2x1 +x2y1) = (x2, y2) (x1, y1)

9
2. Basic Algebraic Properties

 For any complex number z(x,y)


 z + 0 = z; z ∙ 0 = 0; z∙1=z
 Additive Inverse
-z = 0 – z = (-x, -y)  (-x, -y) + (x, y) =(0,0)=0
 Multiplicative Inverse
when z ≠ 0 , there is a number z-1 (u,v) such that
z z-1 =1 , then
(x,y) (u,v) =(1,0)  xu-yv=1, yu+xv=0
x y 1 x y
u 2 ,v  2 z ( 2 , 2 ), z  0
x y 2
x  y2 x y x y
2 2

10
3. Further Properties

 If z1z2=0, then so is at least one of the factors z1 and z2

Proof: Suppose that z1 ≠ 0, then z1-1 exists

z1-1 (z1z2)=z1-1 0 =0
z1-1 (z1z2)=( z1-1 z1) z2 =1 z2 = z2
Associative Laws

Therefore we have z2=0

11
3. Further Properties

 Other two operations: Subtraction and Division

 Subtraction: z1-z2=z1+(-z2)
(x1, y1) - (x2, y2) = (x1, y1)+(-x2, -y2) = (x1 -x2, y1-y2)

z1
 Division:  z1 z2 1 ( z2  0)
z2
z1 x y xx  y y y x x y
 ( x1 , y1 )( 2 2 2 , 2 2 2 )  ( 1 22 12 2 , 1 22 12 2 )
z2 x2 +y2 x2 +y2 x2 +y2 x2 +y2

12
3. Further Properties

 An easy way to remember to computer z1/z2


z1 ( x1  iy1 ) ( x1  iy1 )( x2  iy2 )
 
z2 ( x2  iy2 ) ( x2  iy2 )( x2  iy2 ) commonly used

Note that ( x2  iy2 )( x2  iy2 )  x2 2  y2 2  R

For instance

4i (4  i)(2  3i) 5  14i 5 14


    i
2  3i (2  3i)(2  3i) 13 13 13

13
3. Further Properties

Binomial Formula
n
( z1  z2 ) n   Cnk z1k z2 n  k , n  1, 2,...
k 0

Where
n!
C k
, k  0,1, 2,..., n
k !(n  k )!
n

14
4. Vectors and Moduli

 Any complex number is associated a vector from the


origin to the point (x, y)
y y
z1=(x1, y1)
| z1 | x12  y12
z1+z2
| z2 || z1 | z1
z2=(x2, y2)
z2
O x O x

The moduli or absolute value of z Sum of two vectors


is a nonnegative real number
z1  z2  ( x1  x2 )  i( y1  y2 )
| z | x  y
2 2

15
4. Vectors and Moduli

 Example 1
The distance between two point z1(x1, y1) and z2(x2, y2)
is |z1-z2|.
Note: |z1 - z2 | is the length of the vector
y representing the number z1-z2 = z1 + (-z2)
|z1 - z2 |
Therefore
-z2
z1
z2 z1  z 2  ( x1  x2 )  i( y1  y2 )
z1 - z2
| z1  z2 | ( x1  x2 )2  ( y1  y2 )2
O x

16
4. Vectors and Moduli

 Example 2
The equation |z-1+3i|=2 represents the circle whose
center is z0 = (1, -3) and whose radius is R=2

y
Note: | z-1+3i |
x = | z-(1-3i) |
O z0(1, -3) =2

17
4. Vectors and Moduli

 Some important inequations


y
 Since | Re Z |  | Im Z | | Z | we have
2 2 2
z1=(x, y)
Re Z | Re Z || Z |; Im Z | Im Z || Z | | z1 | x2  y2

 Triangle inequality O x

| z1  z2 || z1 |  | z2 | y

z1+z2
z1
z2
O x

18
4. Vectors and Moduli

 | z1  z2 ||| z1 |  | z2 ||

Proof: when |z1| ≥ |z2|, we write


Triangle inequality
| z1 || ( z1  z2 )  ( z2 ) | | z1  z2 |  | ( z2 ) | | z1  z2 |  | z2 |

| z1  z2 || z1 |  | z2 ||| z1 |  | z2 ||

Similarly when |z2| ≥ |z1|, we write

| z2 || ( z1  z2 )  ( z1 ) | | z1  z2 |  | ( z1 ) | | z1  z2 |  | z1 |

| z1  z2 || z2 |  | z1 ||| z1 |  | z2 ||

19
4. Vectors and Moduli

 | z1  z2 || z1 |  | z2 | | z1  z2  ...zn || z1 |  | z2 | ... | zn |

 | z1  z2 ||| z1 |  | z2 ||

 || z1 |  | z2 ||| z1  z2 || z1 |  | z2 |

20
4. Vectors and Moduli

 Example 3
If a point z lies on the unit circle |z|=1 about the origin,
then we have

y
| z  2 | || z | 2 | 1
z

| z  2 | | z | 2  3 O 1 2 x

21
5. Complex Conjugates

 Complex Conjugate (conjugate)


The complex conjugate or simply the conjugate, of a
complex number z=x+iy is defined as the complex
number x-iy and is denoted by z

y Properties:
z(x,y)
| z || z |

zz
O
x
z (x,-y)

22
5. Complex Conjugates

 If z1=x1+iy1 and z2=x2+iy2 , then

z1  z2  ( x1  x2 )  i( y1  y2 )  ( x1  iy1 )  ( x2  iy2 )  z1  z2

 Similarly, we have
z1  z2  z1  z2

z1 z2  z1  z2

z1 z1
 , z2  0
z2 z2

23
5. Complex Conjugates

 If z  x  iy, z  x  iy , then
z  z  ( x  iy )  ( x  iy )  2 x  2 Re z

z  z  ( x  iy )  ( x  iy )  2 yi  2i Im z

zz zz
Re z  , Im z 
2 2i

 z z  ( x  iy )  ( x  iy )  x 2  y 2 | Z |2

24
5. Complex Conjugates

 Example 1
1  3i
?
2i

1  3i (1  3i)(2  i)

2i (2  i)(2  i)
5  5i

| 2  i |2

5  5i
  1  i
5

25
5. Complex Conjugates

z1 | z1 |
a. | |
z2 | z2 |

z1 2 z1 z1 z1 z1 z1 z1 | z1 |2
proof :| |   ( )    
z2 z2 z2 z2 z2 z2 z2 | z2 |2

| z1 z2 || z1 || z2 | | z n || z |n

 Example 2 | z | 2

| z 3  3z 2  2 z  1| | z 3 |  | 3z 2 |  | 2 z |  |1| | z |3 3 | z |2 2 | z | 1  25
26
6. Exponential Form

 Polar Form
Let r and θ be polar coordinates of the point (x,y) that
corresponds to a nonzero complex number z=x+iy, since
x=rcosθ and y=rsinθ, the number z can be written in polar
form as z=r(cosθ + isinθ), where r>0
θ Θ
y y
arg z  ArgZ  2n , n  0, 1, 2,...
z(x,y) z(x,y)
argz: the argument of z
r r Argz: the principal value of argz
θ θ
  ArgZ  
O O 1
x x

27
6. Exponential Form

 Example 1
The complex number -1-i, which lies in the third quadrant
has principal argument -3π/4. That is
3
Arg (1  i )  
4
It must be emphasized that the principal argument must be in
the region of (-π, +π ]. Therefore,
5
Arg (1  i ) 
4
3 argz = α + 2nπ
arg(1  i )    2n , n  0, 1, 2,...
However, 4 Here: α can be any one
5
arg(1  i )   2n , n  0, 1, 2,... of arguments of z
4
28
6. Exponential Form

 The symbol eiθ , or exp(iθ)


ei  cos   i sin  Why? Refer to Sec. 29


1 1 1 2 1 3 1 n 1
e  1  x  x  x  ...  x  ...   x n
x

1! 2! 3! n! n 0 n !

1 2 n  1
 x  x 2 n 1
n  0 (2n)! n  0 (2 n  1)! Let x=iθ, then we have

   
1 1 1 1
e 
i
(i )  
2n
(i ) 2 n 1
  (i ) 2n
 i[ (i) 2 n 2
2n
 2 n 1 ]
n  0 (2n)! n 1 (2 n  1)! n 0 (2n)! n 1 (2n  1)!
 
1 1
  (1) ( ) i[ (1)
n
2n n 1
( ) 2 n 1 ]
n 0 (2n)! n 1 (2n  1)!
cosθ sinθ

29
6. Exponential Form

 Example 2
The number -1-i in Example 1 has exponential form

3
3 3 i(  )
1  i  2(cos(  )  i sin(  ))  2e 4
4 4

3
3 3 i (    2 n )
1  i  2(cos(  )  i sin(  ))  2e 4 , n  0, 1, 2,...
4 4

30
6. Exponential Form

 z=Reiθ where 0≤ θ ≤2 π

y y

Reiθ θ
Reiθ
z z0
θ
R
O O
x x

z=z0 +Reiθ

|z-z0 |=R

31
7. Products and Powers in Exponential Form

 Product in exponential form


ei1 ei2  (cos 1  i sin 1 )(cos  2  i sin  2 )
 (cos 1 cos  2  sin 1 sin  2 )  i(sin 1 cos  2  cos 1 sin  2 )
 cos(1   2 )  i sin(1   2 )  ei (1 2 )
z1  r1ei1 & z2  r2ei2

z1 z2  (r1ei1 )(r2ei2 )  r1r2ei (1 2 )

( z1 ) n  (r1ei1 ) n  r1n ein1 , n  0, 1, 2,...


z1 r1ei1 r1 i (1 2 ) 1 1ei 0 1 i2
 i2  e , z2  0
 i2  e , z2  0
z2 r2e r2 z2 r2e r2

32
7. Products and Powers in Exponential Form

 Example 1
In order to put ( 3  i)7 in rectangular form, one need
only write

i /6 7 i 7 /6 7 7
( 3  i )  (2e
7
) 2 e 7
 2 (cos
7
 i sin )  64( 3+i)
6 6

33
7. Products and Powers in Exponential Form

 Example 2
de Moivre’s formula

(ei )n  (cos   i sin  )n  cos n  i sin n , n  0, 1, 2,...

(cos   i sin  )  cos 2  i sin 2


2

(cos  i sin  )2  cos2   sin 2   i(2sin  cos  )

pp. 23, Exercise 10, 11

34
8. Arguments of products and quotients

Ifz1  r1ei1 & z2  r2 ei2 , then

z1 z2  (r1ei1 )(r2ei2 )  r1r2ei (1 2 )

θ1 is one of arguments of z1 and


θ2 is one of arguments of z2 then
θ1 +θ2 is one of arguments of z1z2

arg(z1z2)= θ1 +θ2 +2nπ, n=0, ±1, ±2 …

argz1z2= θ1 +θ2 +2(n1+n2)π


= (θ1 +2n1π)+ (θ2 +2n2π)
= argz1+argz2
Q: Argz1z2 = Argz1+Argz2?
Here: n1 and n2 are two integers with n1+n2=n

35
8. Arguments of products and quotients

 Example 1
When z1=-1 and z2=i, then
Arg(z1z2)=Arg(-i) = -π/2


but
Arg(z1)+Arg(z2)=π+π/2=3π/2

Note: Argz1z2=Argz1+Argz2 is not always true.

36
8. Arguments of products and quotients

 Arguments of Quotients

z1
arg( )  arg( z1 z21 )  arg( z1 )  arg( z21 )
z2
 arg( z1 )  arg( z2 )

37
8. Arguments of products and quotients

 Example 2
In order to find the principal argument Arg z when
2
z
1 i 3
observe that
arg z  arg(2)  arg(1  3i)


since Arg (2)   Arg (1  3i ) 
3
 2 2
argz  (  )  2n   2n    
3 3 3
Argz
38
9. Roots of Complex Numbers

 Two equal complex numbers

z1  r1ei1 z2  r2 ei2
At the same point

z1  z2

If and only if

r1  r2 & 1  2  2k
for some integer k

39
9. Roots of Complex Numbers

 Roots of Complex Number


i 0
z  r e
Given a complex number 0 0 , we try to find all
the number z, s.t.z n  z0
Let z  rei then z n  (rei )n  r n ein  r0ei 0

thus we get
r n  r0 & n   0  2k , k  0, 1, 2,...

0
2 k
r  r0 &   
n , k  0, 1, 2,...
n n
The unique positive nth root of r0

40
9. Roots of Complex Numbers

The nth roots of z0 are


0 2 k
z  n r0 exp[i (  )], k  0, 1, 2,...
n n

Note:
1.All roots lie on the circle |z|;
2.There are exactly n distinct roots!

0 2 k
ck  n r0 exp[i (  )], k  0,1, 2,..., n  1
n n
|z|

41
9. Roots of Complex Numbers

0 2 k
ck  n r0 exp[i (  )], k  0,1, 2,..., n  1
n n

0 2 k
ck  n r0 exp(i ) exp(i ), k  0,1, 2,..., n  1
n n

2 2 k
Let wn  exp(i ) then wnk  exp(i )
n n

Therefore ck  c0 wnk , k  0,1, 2,..., n  1


0 2 0 
where c0  n r0 exp(i ) exp(i )  n r0 exp(i 0 )
n n n

Note: the number c0 can be replaced by any particular nth root of z0

42
10. Examples

 Example 1
Let us find all values of (-8i)1/3, or the three roots of the
number -8i. One need only write

8i  8exp[i (  2k )], k  0, 1, 2,...
2
2i
To see that the desired roots are
 2 k
ck  2 exp[i (  )], k  0,1, 2
6 3

 3 i 3 i

43
10. Examples

 Example 2
To determine the nth roots of unity, we start with
1  1exp[i (0  2k )], k  0, 1, 2,...
1
0 2k 2k
And find that 1  n 1exp[i( 
n
)]  exp(i ), k  0,1, 2,..., n  1
n n n

n=3 n=4 n=6

44
10. Examples

 Example 3
the two values ck (k=0,1) of ( 3  i)1/2, which are the
square roots of 3  i , are found by writing

3  i  2 exp[i (  2k )], k  0, 1, 2,...
6


ck  2 exp[i (  k )], k  0,1
12
  
c0  2 exp(i )  2(cos  i sin )
12 12 12
c1  c0

45
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 ε- neighborhood
The ε- neighborhood
| z  z0 | 
of a given point z0 in the complex plane as shown below

y | z  z0 | y | z  z0 |
ε ε
z
z0
| z  z0 |  z 0 | z  z0 | 
z0

O O
x x
Neighborhood Deleted neighborhood

46
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Interior Point
A point z0 is said to be an interior point of a set S whenever
there is some neighborhood of z0 that contains only points of S
 Exterior Point
A point z0 is said to be an exterior point of a set S when there
exists a neighborhood of it containing no points of S;

 Boundary Point (neither interior nor exterior)


A boundary point is a point all of whose neighborhoods
contain at least one point in S and at least one point not in S.
The totality of all boundary points is called the boundary of S.

47
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Consider the set S={z| |z|≤1}


All points z, where |z|>1
are Exterior points of S;
y

S={z| |z|≤1-{1,0}}
z0
z0
O
?
x
z0

All points z, where |z|<1


are Interior points of S; All points z, where |z|=1
are Boundary points of S;

48
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Open Set
A set is open if it and only if each of its points is an
interior point.
 Closed Set
A set is closed if it contains all of its boundary points.
 Closure of a set
The closure of a set S is the closed set consisting of all
points in S together with the boundary of S.

49
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Examples
 S={z| |z|<1} ?
Open Set
 S={z| |z|≤1} ?
Closed Set
 S={z| |z|≤1} – {(0,0)} ?
Neither open nor closed
 S= all points in complex plane ?
Both open and closed

Key: identify those boundary points of a given set

50
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Connected
An open set S is connected if each pair of points z1 and
z2 in it can be joined by a polygonal line, consisting of a
finite number of line segments joined end to end, that
lies entirely in S.
y

O
x

The set S={z| |z|<1 U |z-(2+i)|<1} is open


The open set
However, it is not connected.
1<|z|<2 is connected.
51
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Domain
A set S is called as a domain iff
1. S is open;
2. S is connected.
e.g. any neighborhood is a domain.

 Region
A domain together with some, none, or all of it
boundary points is referred to as a region.

52
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Bounded
A set S is bounded if every point of S lies inside some
circle |z|=R; Otherwise, it is unbounded.
y

e.g. S={z| |z|≤1} is bounded


S R S={z| Rez≥0} is unbounded

O
x

53
11. Regions in the Complex Plane

 Accumulation point
A point z0 is said to be an accumulation point of a set S
if each deleted neighborhood of z0 contains at least one
point of S.
 If a set S is closed, then it contains each of its accumulation
points. Why?
 A set is closed iff it contains all of its accumulation points
e.g. the origin is the only accumulation point of the set Z n=i/n, n=1,2,…

The relationships among the Interior, Exterior, Boundary and Accumulation Points!
 An Interior point must be an accumulation point.
 An Exterior point must not be an accumulation point.
 A Boundary point must be an accumulation point?

54

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