Recent content by jaylwood
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
Thank you so much.- jaylwood
- Post #15
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
So what would be my final answer?- jaylwood
- Post #13
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
what happens to the rt?- jaylwood
- Post #11
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
u+v ? but what happens to the rt?- jaylwood
- Post #9
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
rt eiu eiv What do i do to simplify that? Or reconvert it back to trignometric form?- jaylwood
- Post #5
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
okay here is the problem i have. Given x = r(cos u + i sin u) and y = t(cos v + i sin v) Prove that the amplitude of (xy) is the sum of their amplitudes. I don't understand where to go with it.- jaylwood
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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J
Euler's Theorem Converting from Trignometric to Exponential Form
r(cos u + i sin u) t(cos v + i sin v) How do I convert these into exponential form using Euler's Theorem?- jaylwood
- Thread
- Exponential Form Theorem
- Replies: 14
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help