Using Euler's Formula to Evaluate Complex Numbers in Rectangular Form

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Euler's formula can be applied to evaluate complex numbers in rectangular form, specifically for the expressions (2i)5 and (1+i)-0.5. The first expression simplifies to 32i, with the angle related to the imaginary unit being π/2, leading to the conclusion that (2i)5 equals 32e^(iπ/2). For the second expression, the discussion indicates a need to simplify (1+i) using polar coordinates and Euler's formula, emphasizing the importance of correctly interpreting angles and applying algebraic rules. Participants highlight common mistakes, such as misidentifying angles and the need for clear simplification steps. Understanding these concepts is crucial for accurately evaluating complex numbers using Euler's formula.
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"Use Euler's formula to evaluate the following and write your answer in rectangular form."
A. (2i)5
B. (1+i)-.5

I referred to my precal book and various websites and am still clueless. I started to work out A. but I'm not sure of anything. Here's what I did:

(2i)5 = 32i

On the imaginary/real plane, that forms a 90 degree angle.

\theta = \frac{\pi}{4}

e^{i \theta } = cos \theta + isin \theta

cos \frac{\pi}{4} = 0 & isin\frac{\pi}{4} = i

e^ {\frac{i\pi}{4}} = i

e^ {\frac{\pi}{4}} = ? . . .

Whenever I don't know what I'm doing, I just mimic, and I feel like I'm mimicking incorrectly.
I would really like to know how to do this but can't figure it out on my own. Thanks in advance :)
 
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Well, firstly, a 90o angle isn't \pi /4, it's \pi /2 :-p

If e^{\frac{i\pi}{2}}=i

then 2e^{\frac{i\pi}{2}}=2i

and \left(2e^{\frac{i\pi}{2}}\right)^5=(2i)^5

Can you take it from here?
 
haha thanks, I have a habit of making dumb mistakes like that.

I'm working it a few different ways but keep winding up with:

\cos \theta + i \sin \theta = i

I've flown through all of the other problems on this stupid homework, but I've been working on this problem for about two hours and I still don't know what to do.
 
You're looking at the problem in entirely the wrong way.

You need to simplify:

\left(2e^{\frac{i\pi}{2}}\right)^5

Do it like you would any other real number. What is (ab^2)^3?
 
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