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Complex Numbers Question (1 Viewer)

Will

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Hi, I was wondering if someone could do this for me

if |Z1 + Z2| = |Z1| + |Z2|, show algebraically, that arg(Z1) = arg(Z2)


What I've done so far is

if arg(Z1) = arg(Z2)
then, arg(Z1) - arg(Z2) = 0
then, arg(Z1/Z2) = 0

ie. must show that Z1/Z2 ( R

I think this can be done by showing

Z2 - Z1 = mod(Z1)
or
Z1 + ^Z2 = mod(Z1)
or
Z2 + ^Z1 = mod(Z1)
where ^ denotes the conjugate


can anyone prove this?
 

spice girl

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Willy, use cos rule:

|z1 + z2|^2 = |z1|^2 + |z2|^2 - 2|z1||z2|cosx

x = pi - (arg(Z2) - arg(Z1))
show this using diagram

since |z1 + z2| = |z1| + |z2|
|z1 + z2|^2 = |z1|^2 + |z2|^2 + 2|z1||z2|
cosx = -1
x = pi

arg(Z2) - arg(Z1) = 0
 

KilledInAction

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Hey I understand most of what you did, but I'm having a slight difficulty in drawing the step:

x = pi - (arg(Z2) - arg(Z1))
show this using diagram

I've made a triangle with side lengths |Z1|,|Z2| and |Z1+Z2| and I know which angle x is, but what's the best and simplest way to show x= pi - (arg(Z2) - arg(Z1) ? It doesn't seem to difficult but I'm going around in circles trying to show it :)

The hardest part of complex numbers for me (and most ppl I've spoken to) is definately using vectors:chainsaw:
 

Will

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let A be point Z1
B be point Z2 and C be point Z2 + Z1

x is the angle OAC

angle AOB = argZ1 - argZ2 (by observation)

and OAC = pi - AOB (AC||OB, cointerior angles of parallel lines supplimentary)

thus x = pi - [argZ1 - argZ2]
 

Will

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A friend of mine also proved this result by showing Z1/Z2 is equal to its conjugate, the algebra being quite complex (heh, no pun intended).

It'd be interesting to see how many methods people come up with
 

spice girl

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I thought it would've been obvious that if you have length of one side of a triangle equal to the sum of the lengths of other two sides, you have a degenerate triangle, with the two vectors pointing the same way.
 

Will

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Well yes, the question asks to prove the result geometrically as well as algebraically.

obvious as the statement is,
it was the algebraic method that was beyond me.
 

KilledInAction

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Ahh co-interior angles of course!
Thanx for clearing that out...such a simple explanation always kills me when I've tried unnecessary working. :)
 

Will

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Spicegirl:
technically, your proof is geometric as you use geometric properties (angles, parallel lines, cointerior angles of parallel lines) to give geometric representations of your algebraic constructs.

try again :)
 

Will

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Here we go, algebraic proof #2 (proof #4)

let z1 = a+bi and z2=c+di
square both sides
collect like terms
square both sides again
you end up with the ratio ac=bd

ie b/a = d/c

since argZ1 = arctan (b/a) and argZ2 = arctan (d/c)

therefore argZ1 = argZ2 (as b/a = d/c)

elegant.

i will post the proof using conjugate definitions as soon as i work it out :D
 

spice girl

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Elegant? How ironic! Elegance is an easy way to solve a hard problem, not the other way around.
 

spice girl

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O and you're right btw about the algebraic method thing. I just find it stupid proving the extreme case of the triangle inequality (which is btw, another method: "By the triangle inequality, |z1 + z2| <= |z1| + |z2| {equality when z1, z2 point in the same blody direction}")
 

spice girl

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Originally posted by Will

since argZ1 = arctan (b/a) and argZ2 = arctan (d/c)

therefore argZ1 = argZ2 (as b/a = d/c)
This bit is a little iffy...

arctan gives values between -pi/2 <= arctan(x) <= pi/2
But arg(z) gives values between -pi <= arg(z) <= pi

Clearly you've missed the case arg(z1) = arg(z2) +-pi

So I'll fix by starting that b/a = d/c
so either
1)arg(z1) = arg(z2) +-pi
or 2) arg(z1) = arg(z2)
In any case z1 = k*z2 (k is strictly real)
|z1| + |z2| = |z1 + z2|
|k|*|z2| + |z2| = |k*z2 + z2| = |(k+1)|*|z2|
(|k| + 1)|z2| = |(k+1)|*|z2|
(|k| + 1) = |(k+1)|
thus k >= 0

therefore case (2) is true.
 

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