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         Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra:     more books (18)
  1. The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics) by Benjamin Fine, Gerhard Rosenberger, 1997-06-20
  2. Constructive aspects of the fundamental theorem of algebra. Proceedings of a symposium conducted at the IBM Research Laboratory by Bruno, Henrici, Peter, Editors Dejon, 1969
  3. Constructive aspects of the fundamental theorem of algebra;: Proceedings of a symposium conducted at the IBM Research Laboratory, Zurich-Ruschlikon, Switzerland, June 5-7, 1967,
  4. Constructive aspects of the fundamental theorem of algebra. Proceedings of a symposium conducted at the IBM Research Laboratory by Bruno, Henrici, Peter, Editors Dejon, 1969-01-01
  5. Abstract Algebra: Vector Space, Group, Linear Map, Polynomial, Euclidean Vector, Cauchy Sequence, Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, Power Set
  6. Fundamental Theorems: Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic, Finitely Generated Abelian Group
  7. Field Theory: Field, P-Adic Number, Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, Hyperreal Number, Galois Theory, Finite Field, Algebraically Closed Field
  8. Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
  9. Imaginary Unit: Real number, Complex number, Iota, Polynomial, Imaginary number, Root of unity, Algebraic closure, Complex plane, Fundamental theorem of algebra
  10. Constructive Aspects of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra by Bruno & Peter Henrici. Eds. Dejon, 1969
  11. Complex Analysis: Euler's Formula, Complex Number, Euler's Identity, Exponential Function, Polynomial, Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
  12. Constructive Aspects of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra by Bruno and Peter Henrici. Eds. Dejon, 1969
  13. Constructive aspects of the fundamental theorem of algebra. Proceedings ofa symposium conducted at the IBM Research Laboratory by Bruno, Henrici, Peter, Editors Dejon, 1969-01-01
  14. Algebraic Analysis: Solutions and Exercises, Illustrating the Fundamental Theorems and the Most Important Processes of Pure Algebra by George Albert Wentworth, James Alexander McLellan, et all 2010-01-11

61. Historia Matematica Mailing List Archive: Re: [HM] Fundamental
Re HM fundamental theorem of algebra. Subject Algebra ; Next in threadJulio Gonzalez Cabillon Re HM fundamental theorem of algebra ;
http://sunsite.utk.edu/math_archives/.http/hypermail/historia/apr00/0038.html
Re: [HM] Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
Subject: Re: [HM] Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
From: John Conway ( conway@math.Princeton.EDU
Date: Sat Apr 08 2000 - 14:05:31 EDT The simplest proof of the "fundamental theorem" has always
been this:
1) prove that for any real C we can find an R such that
z^n + az^n-1 + ... + k
3) Prove or quote that the infimum of a continuous function
over a closed and bounded set is attained. [The most

62. Eigenspaces And The Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra
next Nächste Seite Über dieses Dokument Eigenspaces and thefundamental theorem of algebra. Norbert A'Campo. The following
http://www.geometrie.unibas.ch/lehrsaetze/short_ea/
Eigenspaces and the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
Norbert A'Campo The following well-known theorem will be proved first, and then the so-called F undamental Theorem of Algebra will be deduced from it. Theorem 1 Let be a -vectorspace of finite dimension, , and let be a linear transformation. Then there exists a linear subspace in with and If you wish to study more you can do so online here or download first the compressed postscript file ea.ps.gz
  • WWW Administrator 2001-10-30
  • 63. Eigenspaces And The Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra
    Eigenspaces and the fundamental theorem of algebra. Norbert A'Campo. Corollary2 (``fundamental theorem of algebra'') Let be a polynomial of degree .
    http://www.geometrie.unibas.ch/lehrsaetze/ea/
    Next: About this document ...
    Eigenspaces and the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
    Norbert A'Campo The following well-known theorem will be proved first, and then the so-called Fundamental Theorem of Algebra will be deduced from it. Theorem 1 Let be a -vectorspace of finite dimension, , and let be a linear transformation. Then there exists a linear subspace in with and
    Preliminaries: The angular variation is defined for , with by the equation
    For with and the angular variations obey the following additive rule: For a continuous curve the angular variation along is defined to be
    where , is chosen in such a way that for all with the inequality holds. The angular variation does not depend on the actual choice of since for two such choices and it follows from the additive rule: The angular variation satisfies:
    For a closed continuous curve it follows To see this, observe: For a constant curve we have . To see this, compute with For the curve , we have . Compute with For a continuous family of closed, continuous curves we have Proof: The function is uniformly continuous. Choose

    64. Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra

    http://cauchy.peru.edu/~newman/FTAlgebra.htm

    65. The Fundamental Theorem For Palindromic Polynomials
    fundamental theorem of algebra for Palindromic Polynomials With Real CoefficientsAny palindromic polynomial with real coefficients can be factored into a
    http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath294.htm
    The Fundamental Theorem for Palindromic Polynomials
    Return to MathPages Main Menu

    66. Math215    Complex Analysis
    functions. The integral calculus of complex functions leads to some elegantresults including the fundamental theorem of algebra. These
    http://www.maths.lancs.ac.uk/dept/coursedescr/2all/node3.html
    Next: Math220 Linear Algebra Up: Second-year courses in Mathematics Previous: Math210 Real Analysis
    Math215 Complex Analysis
    Prerequisites Aims The purpose of this course is to give an introduction to the theory of functions of a single complex variable together with some basic applications. The treatment will be analytical, with topological aspects of the theory suppressed as far as is possible. Central to the approach is Cauchy's theorem for a triangle, the proof being based on a bisection argument. This result will be extended to starlike regions by the use of primitives. This provides a sufficiently general class of domains for elementary applications. The results of function theory will be illustrated by the evaluation of some standard definite integrals. The Cauchy-Riemann criterion for complex differentiability will be presented to emphasize the link between real and complex analysis. The maximum modulus principle will be discussed in the context of harmonic functions in the plane. Description Complex Analysis has its origins in differential calculus and the study of polynomial equations. In this course we consider the differential calculus of functions of a single complex variable and study power series and mappings by complex functions. The integral calculus of complex functions leads to some elegant results including the fundamental theorem of algebra. These classical theorems are also used to evaluate real integrals. The course ends with basic discussion of harmonic functions, which are important in physics.

    67. NRICH Mathematics Enrichment Club (1655.html)
    fundamental theorem of algebra By Brad Rodgers (P1930) on Wednesday, November22, 2000 1205 am Tada! The fundamental theorem of algebra.
    http://www.nrich.maths.org.uk/askedNRICH/edited/1655.html
    Asked NRICH
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    Prime
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    Club
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    Archive Problems Solutions Articles Inspirations ... Interactivities Web board Ask NRICH Asked NRICH NRICH Club Register Tough Nuts About Help! ... Where is NRICH? Associated Projects Maths Thesaurus MOTIVATE EuroMaths Millennium Maths ... Project Display maths using fonts images Help Back Issues Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Bernard's Bag(P) - solutions(P) Penta Probs(P) - solutions(P) Let Me Try(P) - solutions(P) Kid's Mag(P) Play Games(P) Staff Room(P) 6 Problems - solutions 15+Challenges - solutions Articles Games LOGOland Editorial News Fundamental Theorem of Algebra By Brad Rodgers (P1930) on Wednesday, November 22, 2000 - 12:05 am Thanks, Brad By Dan Goodman (Dfmg2) on Wednesday, November 22, 2000 - 01:21 am C p it p it p it C Unfortunately at this point I have to bring in another intuitive idea as the machinery required would be too involved to go into here. As we continously vary paths in C C Given that C n n is much bigger than z n-1 p it By Dan Goodman (Dfmg2) on Wednesday, November 22, 2000 - 01:22 am

    68. Kathryn Rice : Carl Friedrich Gauss
    The fundamental theorem of algebra was first stated by d’Alembertin 1746 but was only partially proved. Gauss, at the age of
    http://www.maths.adelaide.edu.au/pure/pscott/history/kathryn/Fundamental Theorem
    Works The fundamental theorem of algebra states that every equation of the n th degree has n roots. We can alternatively express this theorem as: the polynomial can always be divided into n linear factors of the form a i The proof of this theorem is done in two steps, first showing that an equation of the n -th degree has at least one roots and then showing that the equation has n roots and no more. Note that it is possible for several of the n roots a a a n to be the same. e.g. a a a In this case a is a multiple root and for the example given is a root of multiplicity three.
    Back to Education
    Main Menu On to Number Theoretical Work

    69. The Fundamental Theorems Of Mathematics
    The fundamental theorem of algebra Every Polynomial equation having ComplexCoefficients and degree n 0 has at least one Complex Root.
    http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/7773/funda.html
    Fundamental Theorems
    Sure, there are lots of topics in mathematics. And for each topic, there is a number of theorems. But only one theorem in each subject area earns the title of
    THE FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM OF X
    where X is the particular subject in question.
    So here we go...
    The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic:
    Any positive integer n can be represented in exactly one way as a product of primes p i
    n p p p p
    k
    The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra:
    Every Polynomial equation having Complex Coefficients and degree n > has at least one Complex Root.
    The five postulates of (Euclidean) Geometry:
    (note: we do not list a fundamental theorem here. Rather, we note that all theorems
    must follow from a set of statements simply assumed to be true. Since all other theorems
    follow from these postulates, we acknowledge said postulates as the "fundamentals".)

    1. A straight line segment can be drawn joining any two points. 2. Any straight line segment can be extended indefinitely in a straight Line. 3. Given any straight line segment, a circle can be drawn having the segment as radius and one endpoint as center.

    70. Campusweb
    theorem of the calculus, Cauchy?s theorem or Cauchy?s integral formula; (e) givea complete proof of the fundamental theorem of algebra; (f) classify the
    http://www.leeds.ac.uk/students/ugmodules/math2021.htm
    SEARCH
    Undergraduate Module Catalogue
    Complex Analysis
    10 credits Taught
    Semester 2, Year running Pre-requisites MATH2011, or equivalent. Exclusion: Not with MATH2090 Co-requisites None Objectives
    General introduction to complex analysis, which is central to Pure Mathematics, with applications relevant in Applied Mathematics. On completion of this module, students should be able to: (a) use the Cauchy-Riemann equations to decide where a given function is analytic; (b) compute the harmonic conjugates of typical harmonic functions; (c) determine the radius of convergence of complex power series; (d) compute standard contour integrals using the fundamental theorem of the calculus, Cauchy?s theorem or Cauchy?s integral formula; (e) give a complete proof of the fundamental theorem of algebra; (f) classify the singularities of analytic functions and to compute, in the case of a pole, its order and residue; (g) evaluate typical definite integrals by using the calculus of residues. Syllabus
    Form of teaching

    Lectures (22 hours) and examples classes (11 hours).

    71. Campusweb
    BorsukUlam theorem. fundamental theorem of algebra. Jordan curve theorem, Pancakeand Ham Sandwich theorems. . 8. Computations of fundamental groups.
    http://www.leeds.ac.uk/students/ugmodules/math3024.htm
    SEARCH
    Undergraduate Module Catalogue
    Homotopy and Surfaces
    15 credits Taught
    Semester 2, Year running Pre-requisites (MATH1031 or MATH1050) and MATH1021 or equivalent. Co-requisites None Objectives
    To provide a first introduction to elementary ideas from algebra and topology that are linked in modern mathematical developments. The basic concept studied is that of the fundamental group of a polyhedral surface. On completion of this module, students should be able to: (a) classify a given surface; (b) calculate the fundamental group of some simple surfaces; (c) use a knowledge of the fundamental group to obtain results in algebra, analysis and topology. Syllabus
    Form of teaching

    Lectures: 26 hours. One video class plus 6 examples classes. Form of assessment
    One 3 hour examination at end of semester (100%). Last updated: 14/03/03 14:43:42 Undergraduate Module Catalogue Taught Postgraduate Module Catalogue Errors, omissions, failed links etc should be notified to Geoff Lidster Information regarding content of individual modules should be obtained from the departmental contact who can be found on the module index page

    72. Math 416 - Montana State University
    3. Numbers in General, Real numbers, complex numbers, regular polygons, andthe fundamental theorem of algebra. 02/09 The Euler Totient Function phi.
    http://www.math.montana.edu/courses/m416/
    Math 416 - Modern Algebra
    Final Examinations and Grades now available in 2-214 Wilson Hall
    Last modified Tuesday, May 11, 1999 11:22 AM Mathematical Sciences Main Page Prerequisites - Math 333 (Linear Algebra)
    Class Meeting Times and Location
    Tuesday 9:00 - 9:50 am, and 1:10-2:00 pm, and Thursday, 9:00 - 9:50 am - all in room 1-148 of Wilson Hall. Send comments to Richard Gillette Required Textbook -
    Title Elements of Algebra: Geometry, Numbers, Equations,
    Author John Stillwell
    Publisher Springer-Verlag (1994)
    Instructor: Richard Gillette
    Office: Wilson 2-230 Phone: 994-5363 e-mail: gillette@mathfs.math.montana.edu
    Review for the Mid-Term Examination
    Syllabus
    Chapter Comments Tuesday am Tuesday pm Thursday 1. Algebra and Geometry Straightedge and compass constructions and solution of equations by radicals. Blank 01/13 (Wednesday)
    Blank 01/15 (Friday)
    Blank 1. Algebra and Geometry, continued
    Blank
    Blank
    Blank 2. The Rational Numbers Rings and fields of congruence classes, and Fermat's Little Theorem. For 02/09: [p. 29] 2.7.1-2 [p. 31] 2.8.4-6

    73. AlgeL51
    Lecture 5.1 fundamental theorem of algebra. ã 1999 MG Settle BackgroundIn the last lecture we discussed ending behavior, turning
    http://www.aquiz.com/ALec51/
    Lecture 5.1 Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
    1999 M.G. Settle
    Background In the last lecture we discussed ending behavior, turning points, and real number zeros of polynomial functions. We found that a n th degree polynomial function can have at most n zeros and that an odd degree polynomial function must have at least one real number zero. In this lecture we consider zeros that are complex numbers and we find that, in a sense, an n th degree polynomial function has exactly n zeros in the complex numbers.
    General Form of a Polynomial Equation An equation such as x - 3x - 2 = is a 3rd degree polynomial equation. The general form of such an equation is shown For x - 3x - 2 = we have n = 3 and a = 1, a = 0, a = -3, and a = -2. This much like for 2x + 3x - 1 = we have that a = 2, b = 3, and c = -1. Considering
    + 3x - 1 = as a general polynomial equation we say that a = 2, a = 3, and
    a
    The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra In 1799, Carl Friedrich Gauss in his doctoral dissertation proved the following theorem, which we call the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. A root of an equation is simply a number that solves the equation. The proof of this theorem is beyond the scope of this course. It states that equations such as x

    74. ¥N¼Æ¾Ç°ò¥»©w²z The Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra
    The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
    http://cartan.math.ntu.edu.tw/~b871044/topic/Fund_thm_of_algebra.htm
    ¥N ¼Æ ¾Ç °ò ¥» ©w ²z
    ¥N¼Æ¾Ç°ò¥»©w²z(The fundamental theorem of algebra¡A²ºÙ FTA)¬O»¡¡G ¨C­Ó¹ê«Y¼Æ¦h¶µ¦¡³£¥i¥H¼g¦¨½u©Ê©M¤G¦¸¹ê¦]¤lªº­¼¿n µ¥µ¥¡C Bombelli ¦b¥L1572¦~¥Xª©ªº Algebra Albert Girard C Albert Girard ªº»¡ªk¬O¤£Ò¦Û©úªº¡A ¥L­Ì ¬Û«H ¥u ³Ñ¤U¡GÒ©ú©Ò¦³ªº®Ú³£¬O a + bi¡Aa¡Bb ¬O¹ê¼Æªº§Î¦¡¡C Albert Girard ¨S¦³¨¬°÷ªº­I´º¨Ó¤F¸Ñ³o­Ó°ÝD¡C 1702¦~ Leibniz¡©Ò©ú¡ªFTA ¬O¿ùªº¡A¦]¬°¥L»¡ x + t ¤£¯à¤À¸Ñ¦¨¨â­Ó¹ê¤G¦¸¦¡ªº­¼¿n¡A¥L©¿²¤¤F¡Ôi ¬O¥i¥H¼g¦¨ a + bi¡Aa¡Bb ¬O¹ê¼Æªº§Î¦¡ªº¡C 1742¦~¡AEuler ¼gµ¹ Nicolaus(II) Bernoulli ©M Goldbach ªº«H¤¤«ü¥X Leibniz ªº¤Ï¨Ò¬O¿ùªº ©M w ¨Ï±o n ¦¸¦h¶µ¦¡¤À¸Ñ¦¨¨â­Ó³Ì°ª¦¸¶µ«Y¼Æ¬O 1 ªº 2 n-1 ¦¸¦h¶µ¦¡¡C¦]¬°¥ô¦ó¦h¶µ¦¡³£¥i¥H³z¹L­¼¤W¾A·íªº ax k ¨Ï¨ä¦¨¬°³Ì°ª¦¸¶µ«Y¼Æ¬O 1 ªº 2 n ¦¸¦h¶µ¦¡ªº§Î¦¡¡A µM«á­«½Æ¤À¸Ñªº°Ê§@§Y¥i§¹¦¨Ò©ú¡C¦Ü©ó¦p¦ó¤À¸Ñ¦h¶µ¦¡¡AEuler ¥ý¥Î Cardan ¦b Ars Magna ¸Ì´£¨ìªºÅÜ´«§â¦h¶µ¦¡ªº¦¸°ª¦¸¶µ«Y¼ÆÅܬ°¹s¡AµM«á¥L°²©w¡G x + Ax + Bx
    = (x m + tx m-1 + gx m-2 +...) (x m - tx m-1 + hx m-2 Gauss ¡C1799¦~¡A Gauss ¦b¥Lªº³Õ¤h½×¤å¸Ì´£¥X¥Lªº²Ä¤@­ÓÒ©ú¨¹ï«e¤HªºÒ©ú´£¥X¤Ï»é¡C ¥LµLº¬O²Ä¤@­Ó«ü¥X«e¤HÒ©úªº®Ú¥»·å²«ªº¤H¡A§Y¤£À³¨Æ¥ý°²©w®Úªº¦s¦b¦Ó¸Õ¹Ï¥h±À¾É¨ä©Ê½è¡C Gauss ¹ï Euler ªºÒ©úªºµû»y¬O¡G m + ax m-1 + bx m-2 Gauss ¦Û¤v¨¨S«ÅºÙ¥Lµ¹¥X¤F²Ä¤@­Ó¥¿½TªºÒ©ú¡A¥L¥u»¡¥Lµ¹¥X¤F ·s ªºÒ©ú¡C¨Ò¦p¡A¹ï©ó d'Alembert ªºÒ©ú¡AÁöµM¤]¦³§åµû¡A¦ý¥L»¡¡G ¥i¥H¦b¬Û¦Pªº°ò¦¤W«Ø¥ß¤@­ÓÄY®æªºÒ©ú¡C Gauss i Argand ªºÒ©ú°Ý¥@«á¨â¦~¡A1816¦~ Gauss µoªí¤F¥L²Ä¤G­Ó FTA ªºÒ©ú¡C Gauss ¥Î Euler ªº¤èªk¡A¦ý¤£¬O¹ï¦³¥i¯à¤£¦s¦bªº®Ú§@¹Bºâ¡A¦Ó¬O¹ï¥¼ª¾¼Æ§@¹Bºâ¡C³o­ÓÒ©ú§¹¥þ¥¿½T¡C Gauss ²Ä¤T­ÓÒ©ú¤]¬O¦b1816¦~´£¥Xªº¡C ¸ò²Ä¤@­ÓÒ©ú¤@¼Ë¡A¥»½è¤W¬O©Ý¾ëªº¡C1831¦~¡A

    75. Precalculus: Reference/Algebra
    The fundamental theorem of algebra (Hartig). The fundamental theorem of algebrais usually stated as follows Every polynomial has at least one zero.
    http://www.scit.wlv.ac.uk/university/scit/maths/calculus/modules/topics/precalc/
    Precalculus
    REFERENCE
    The Quadratic Formula (Hartig)
    The quadratic formula is used to obtain solutions to quadratic equations. These are equations of the form
    ax^2 + bx + c =
    where the leading coefficient, a, is not 0.
    Derivation of the Quadratic Formula
    Solutions to the equation above have the form
    x = ­ b ± sqrt(b^2 ­ 4ac)/2a .
    This is is called the quadratic formula. To see why this works, start with the quadratic equation, and divide through by the leading coefficient, a:
    x^2 + b/ax + c/a =
    Subtract c/a from both sides, x + b/ax = ­c/a and complete the square on the left (add same term to right):
    x^2 + b/ax + b^2/4a^2= ­c/a+ b^2/4a^2
    Factor the left side and combine terms on the right side:
    (x + b/2a)^2 = b^2 ­ 4ac/4a^2 Take the square root of both sides: x + b/2a = ±sqrt(b^2 ­ 4ac)/2a^2 The quadratic formula is then obtained by subtracting b/2a from both sides of the last equation.
    The Discriminant
    The number b^2 ­ 4ac is called the discriminant of the quadratic. Observe that if it happens to be a negative number, then the right side of the last equation is imaginary and the solutions to the quadratic will be complex conjugates of one another. See the section on complex numbers if you need a review of how these work. You can study the

    76. F
    Functional Method Functional method for several variables Functional notation Fundamentallaws of algebra fundamental theorem of algebra Fundamental Theorem of
    http://kr.cs.ait.ac.th/~radok/math/mat/f.htm
    F Face angle
    Factor

    Factor of proportionality

    Factorizable
    ...
    Furniture

    77. MAA: Math Horizons--Subscribe
    A Bicentennial for the fundamental theorem of algebra. Two hundredyears ago, a promising young mathematician at the (later defunct
    http://www.mathcs.carleton.edu/math_horizons/teasers11-99.html
    A Bicentennial for the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
    Two hundred years ago, a promising young mathematician at the (later defunct) University of Helmstedt submitted a doctoral dissertation with the lengthy Latin title, Demonstratio nova theorematis omnem functionem algebraicam rationalem integram unius variabilis in factores reales primi vel secondi gradus resolvi posse : "A new proof of the theorem that every rational integral algebraic function in one variable can be resolved into real factors of first or second degree." Today, we might shorten things to "A new proof of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra." The student's name? Carl Friedrich Gauss.
    From Figure to Form
    Have you ever noticed the enchanting patterns in the wing of a butterfly, the fascinating symmetries in plants, and the fantastic shell constructions of snails and mussels? We find mathematics everywhere in nature: a veritable geometry text lying open right before our eyes.
    Chess Queens and Maximum Unattacked Cells
    There is now an enormous literature on the old classic task of placing eight queens on a chessboard so that no queen attacks another. There are twelve solutions, not counting trivial rotations and reflections. The task naturally generalizes to enumerating the number of solutions for

    78. Complex Numbers
    The fundamental theorem of algebra. This important fact is called the fundamentaltheorem of algebra. Let z 1 be a solution of the above polynomial equation.
    http://www.jgsee.kmutt.ac.th/exell/Numbers/CplxNum.htm
    NUMBER SYSTEMS AND ANALYSIS
    Complex Numbers
    Contents
    Representation of Complex Numbers
    Algebra of Complex Numbers

    Complex Numbers are Not Ordered

    Complex Conjugate
    ...
    Sequences
    Representation of Complex Numbers
    A complex number z has the form z = x + i.y, where i = -1. The real number x is called the real part of z , and the real number y is called the imaginary part of z . We write: x = Re(z), y = Im(z). The complex number z may also be written in the form z = r.cos theta + i.r.sin theta where r = x + y , cos theta = x/r, and sin theta = y/r. The real number r is called the absolute value of z , and the real number theta is called the argument of z . We write: theta = arg(z). A complex number may be represented by a point in the complex plane (see Fig. 1). Fig. 1. The complex number z in the complex plane.
    Algebra of Complex Numbers
    The algebra of complex numbers is the same as the algebra of real numbers, except that i is always replaced by -1. Let z = x + i.y = r (cos theta + i.sin theta
    z = x + i.y = r (cos theta + i.sin

    79. Www.MathWords.com
    fundamental theorem of algebra The theorem that establishes that, usingcomplex numbers, all polynomials can be factored. A generalization
    http://www.mathwords.com/f/f005.html
    Fundamental Theorem of Algebra : The theorem that establishes that, using complex numbers, all polynomials can be factored. A generalization of the theorem asserts that any polynomial of degree degree has exactly zeros, counting multiplicity. See factor of a polynomial, factor theorem, polynomial facts.
    Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic : The assertion that once you have found a prime factorization for a positive integer, you have found the only such factorization. There is no different factorization lurking out there somewhere. See prime number.
    Fundamental Theorem of Calculus : The theorem that establishes the connection between derivatives, antiderivatives, and definite integrals. The fundamental theorem of calculus is usually given in two parts.

    80. No Match For "Fundamental Theorem Of Algebra"
    Sorry, no match for fundamental theorem of algebra . The nearest termsalphabetically are functor and funky. Note some crossreferences
    http://www.dooki.com/cgi-bin/foldoc.cgi?Fundamental Theorem of Algebra

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