What is the polar form of 1/z and why does the sign of the argument change?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around finding the polar form of the reciprocal of complex numbers, specifically 1/z, where z is given in rectangular form. The subject area includes complex analysis and polar coordinates.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between the arguments of a complex number and its reciprocal, questioning why the sign of the argument changes. Various representations of the polar form and the implications of De Moivre's theorem are discussed.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the concepts, offering insights and questioning the reasoning behind the sign change in the argument. Some have provided mathematical expressions and examples to illustrate their points, while others are seeking clarification on the underlying principles.

Contextual Notes

There are references to specific complex numbers and their polar forms, with some participants noting the potential for multiple representations of the same angle in polar coordinates. The discussion includes attempts to generalize findings to any complex expression.

cmcc3119
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Hi There.

I was given this question and the answer:

Find the polar forms of 1/z where z = \sqrt{}3 + i


and 1/z where z = 4\sqrt{}3 -4i

Answers respectively are:

1/2 cis(-\pi/6)

1/8 cis(\pi/6)


Can someone please explain to me why it is that the sign of the argument changes in the answer from + to -, for the first question, and - to +, for the second question?
 
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Because the argument of a+bi and the argument of a-bi are negatives of each other? Why? Of course they don't have to be. You could equally well have written the first one as (1/2)*cis(11*pi/6). Why?
 
Last edited:
I understand that that is how the question is written and the sign indicates the point position in the plane. Sorry I worded the question wrong.

Basically, z = \sqrt{}3 + i

Polar form of this is: 2( cis \pi/6 )

then working out 1/z the answer is 1/2 (cis -\pi/6)

I do not know why the sign changes to make \pi/6 negative and whether you take 1 as r, and z as t, and use the formula for division which is r/t ( cos (\pi - \phi) + isin (\pi - \phi) but when I tried that I still could not come up with a logical explanation it seemed.
 
\frac{1}{\sqrt{3} + i} = \frac{\sqrt{3} -i}{3+1} = \frac{1}{4} (\sqrt{3} - i) = \frac{1}{4} \left [2 \left \angle -\frac{\pi}{6} \right]

You could generalise the same thing for any \mbox{a,b} \in \Re for any complex expression a+bi.

EDIT: To expand on this note that by De Moivre's formula:

(cos \theta + isin \theta)^n = cos(n \theta) + isin(n \theta)

Let z = r (cos \theta + isin\theta).
z^n = r^n (cos(n \theta) + i sin(n \theta))

Let n=-1, as in your case where we want to find the reciprocal.

\frac{1}{z} = \frac{1}{r} (cos(-\theta) + isin(-\theta)) = \frac{1}{r} (cos(\theta) - isin(\theta))

Thereby the sign changes from '+' to '-'.
 
Last edited:
1/cis(theta)=cis(-theta). Try and show that as an exercise. Hint: show cis(theta)*cis(-theta)=1 because sin(theta)^2+cos(theta)^2=1.
 
I have a problem with a question about polar form, could you help me please?

z=3(cos100degree+isin100degree)

give the polar form of 1/z.
 
nickbakay said:
I have a problem with a question about polar form, could you help me please?

z=3(cos100degree+isin100degree)

give the polar form of 1/z.

Posting your own thread is better than tagging onto another one, but ok. What's cis(100*degree)*cis(-100*degree)? I'm assuming you know cis(a)=cos(a)+i*sin(a).
 

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