Why the point of x + iy would be (x, y) ?

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Argand diagrams represent complex numbers in a two-dimensional plane, where the x-axis denotes real parts and the y-axis denotes imaginary parts. A complex number in standard form, a + ib, corresponds to the point (a, b) on this diagram. Real numbers are represented as points on the x-axis, specifically as (a, 0). The operations defined for ordered pairs in R² apply similarly to complex numbers, allowing for addition and multiplication in this context. Thus, the relationship between complex numbers and their representation on Argand diagrams is fundamentally about notation and coordinate systems.
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What argand diagrams really are ? Is there any difference between graph and argand diagram?

For complex number i is a sign that is count as \sqrt[]{-1}
Then why the point for a + ib would be (a, b) in argand diagram ?

That means, x = real part = a
y = imaginary part = b
so if i want to find out real numbers point than it would be on x-axis alone, right? [would the point for 'a' (a € Real number) would be (a, 0) in argand diagram ?]
 
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I just think of it as a matter of notation. To develop the ordered pairs of real numbers, define an addition and multiplication on R^2:

(a,b) + (x,y) = (a+x, b+y)
(a,b) * (x,y) = (ax-by, bx+ay)

According to this definition, (0,1)*(0,1) = (-1,0) and is then denoted i^2 by construction. Rewriting (a,b) as a+bi and calling the plane C rather than R^2, the operations hold:

(a+bi) + (x+yi) = (a+x) + (b+y)i
(a+bi) * (x+yi) = (ax-by) + (ay+bx)i

And if b=0 in a+bi then a+0i = a which is the real part of the complex number and is a real number, also known as (a,0) in C.
 
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Hi I_am_no1! :smile:

(have a square-root: √ :wink:)
I_am_no1 said:
Is there any difference between graph and argand diagram?

Not really …

a complex number can be written in standard form as a + ib, or in polar form as re, and they correspond to cartesian and polar coordinates on an argand diagram.
For complex number i is a sign that is count as \sqrt[]{-1}
Then why the point for a + ib would be (a, b) in argand diagram ?

That means, x = real part = a
y = imaginary part = b
so if i want to find out real numbers point than it would be on x-axis alone, right? [would the point for 'a' (a € Real number) would be (a, 0) in argand diagram ?]

Yes, the x-axis is all the real numbers, and the y-axis is all the imaginary numbers …

for that reason, they're also called the real axis and the imaginary axis. :smile:
 
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