Arun Ram Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of Melbourne Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 12 February 2012
At some point humankind wanted to count things and so we discovered the positive integers,
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...
−3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...
ab , a an integer, b an integer, b≠0.
all decimal expansions.
GREAT for addition, subtraction, multiplication and division, BUT not so great for finding −9=????, ...and so we discovered the complex numbers,
a+bi, where a and b are real numbers and i=−1.
GREAT! We now have
i-axis noti-axis 1 i 0 2+3i -2-i
This is REALLY why we like the complex numbers. The fundamental theorem of algebra says that ANY POLYNOMIAL (for example, x12673 +2563x159 +πx121 +7x23 +962112) can be factored completely as (x-u1) (x-u2) ⋯ (x-un) where u1,u2, …un are complex numbers.
These notes are a retyped version of notes of Arun Ram from http://researchers.ms.unimelb.edu.au/~aram@unimelb/Notespre2005/nums8.13.03.pdf. Very likely this was originally an introductory lecture for a calculus class. It has been used by Arun Ram in various edited forms in numerous research and teaching presentations since 1999. This can be viewed as motivation and introduction for the pages: The integers ℤ, The Rationals ℚ, The Real numbers ℝ, The complex numbers ℂ.
[Ram] Lecture 1: September 6, 2000.
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