NoSniping said:
I honestly have no idea how the pythagorean theorem comes in here. Could you show me please?
Your textbook surely has the explanation in there somewhere.
To point you in the right direction, a complex number has two components: an imaginary component and a real component.
The figure below shows two complex numbers on the complex plane.
[Image taken from Wikipedia]
In the image, both numbers are different, although they share the same magnitude. (The figure shows what are called "complex conjugate" numbers, but that's more detail than I wish to get into here.)
My point is that although a complex number can be represented by its real and imaginary components, it can also be specified in terms of its magnitude (
r in the figure) and phase angle (\varphi in the figure). [Edit: to be really accurate, that bottom complex number
should have had its angle specified as - \varphi, but again, that's more detail than I want to get into here.]
For the problem in this thread, the phase angle \varphi isn't very important, but the magnitude is.
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Edit: Actually, this is probably a better, less cluttered figure also taken from
Wikipedia. So what is the magnitude or "length" (if you will) of that number?:
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Yet another edit: In my earlier description, I used "j" to represent the unit imaginary number instead of "i". This is common when discussing electricity to avoid confusion with the current, which is also denoted by the letter "i". When discussing pure mathematics, the unit imaginary number is usually "i", but in electrical engineering (and physics discussing electricity) it's "j".