What are complex numbers? | Essence of complex analysis #2
Mathemaniac Mathemaniac
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 Published On Aug 18, 2021

A complete guide to the basics of complex numbers. Feel free to pause and catch a breath if you feel like it - it's meant to be a crash course!

Complex numbers are useful in basically all sorts of applications, because even in the real world, making things complex sometimes, oxymoronically, makes things simpler. This is the basis for a lot of physical applications, like circuit analysis, as well as slightly more far-fetched like Fourier analysis or Laplace transforms. Even for pure mathematicians, this is very useful due to its algebraic closure, and the beautiful world of complex analysis. As said before in the previous video, complex analysis is an extremely powerful tool that everyone should be excited about!

This video will cover basically all of the topics you will ever learn in a normal course in complex numbers, or things considered basics in complex analysis, namely, Cartesian and polar ways of representation, Euler's formula and identity, the different operations of complex numbers, including complex exponentiation like i^i, de Moivre's theorem helping us find nth root of any complex numbers and so on. Even if you know a lot about complex numbers, maybe the proofs of Euler's formula is something that you might not have seen, or just maybe use this as a refresher! This video also touches on the argument issue, which could naturally lead to branch cuts, but this will be postponed to the next video.

This is a part of a video series on complex analysis. Next video is going to be about visualising complex functions, and of course, the messy stuff about it, like the branch points and branch cuts. Don't forget to subscribe with the bell icon on so that you can be notified of my new uploads in the series!

Video chapters:
00:00 Sarcastic and serious introductions
01:32 1.1 Complex plane - Cartesian way
02:47 1.2 Complex plane - Polar way (Intro)
03:25 1.3 Arguments about arguments
04:57 1.4 Interconversion
07:48 2.1 Euler's formula - classic proof
09:22 2.2 Euler's formula - 2nd proof
13:03 3.1 Operations - addition/subtraction
14:12 3.2 Operations - multiplication
16:06 3.3 Operations - conjugation
17:45 3.4 Operations - division
19:23 3.5 Operations - exponentiation
20:11 3.6 Operations - logarithm
21:50 3.7 Operations - sine/cosine
23:56 4.1 de Moivre's theorem - intro
24:49 4.2 de Moivre's theorem - nth roots
28:53 4.3 de Moivre's theorem - Euler's formula 3rd proof
31:12 Outro

Music used:
Asher Fulero - Beseeched
Aakash Gandhi - Kiss the Sky
Asher Fulero - Night Snow
Asher Fulero - Renunciation
Asher Fulero - Unrequited

All obtained from YouTube audio library.

THINGS MENTIONED AND FURTHER READING/WATCHING:
   • e^(iπ) in 3.14 minutes, using dynamic...   (3Blue1Brown video on the second proof)
   • How is pi calculated to trillions of ...   (My video on pi calculation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelfond... (Gelfond-Schneider theorem: why e^(-pi/2) is transcendental)
   • 500 years of NOT teaching THE CUBIC F...   (Mathologer video on cubic formula)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_e... (Cubic equation)
https://brilliant.org/wiki/de-moivres... (More uses of de Moivre’s theorem; not sponsored)
   • e to the pi i for dummies   (Mathologer video on the final proof of Euler’s formula)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmag... (Originally wanted to put this in, but don’t know where to put it, so: a nice application of complex numbers)

Other than commenting on the video, you are very welcome to fill in a Google form linked below, which helps me make better videos by catering for your math levels:
https://forms.gle/QJ29hocF9uQAyZyH6

If you want to know more interesting Mathematics, stay tuned for the next video!

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If you are wondering how I made all these videos, even though it is stylistically similar to 3Blue1Brown, I don't use his animation engine Manim, but I will probably reveal how I did it in a potential subscriber milestone, so do subscribe!

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