A number of the form a+bi where a and b are real numbers and i is the square root of -1.
terms of interference complex
The only thing I can think of that you might mean is an imaginary or complex number. Since there is no solution to √(-1) mathematicians labeled it as i which is the imaginary number, and any number that includes purely i is also imaginary. Complex numbers are a mix of both real and imaginary numbers. for example 3 is real, 5i is imaginary and 3+5i is complex. Hopefully this answers what you meant.
not much.
not much.
They had a complex system of colorful knots. A different color meant a different letter or number. Scientists still don't know what this means.
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Adjoint operator of a complex number?
The absolute value of a complex number is the magnitude of the number, which is found from sqrt(a² + b²) for the complex number a + bi
You get a complex number unless the real number happens to be 0 or 1.
Yes. And since Real numbers are a subset of complex numbers, a complex number can also be a pure real.Another AnswerYes, for example: (0 + j5) is a complex number, whose 'real' number is zero.
No. A complex number is a number that has both a real part and an imaginary part. Technically, a pure imaginary number ... which has no real part ... is not a complex number.
Graphically, the conjugate of a complex number is its reflection on the real axis.