In mathematics, an imaginary number (or purely imaginary number) is a complex number whose square is a negative real number. Imaginary numbers were defined in 1572 by Rafael Bombelli. At the time, such numbers were thought not to exist, much as zero and the negative numbers were sometimes regarded by some as fictitious or useless. Many other mathematicians were slow to believe in imaginary numbers at first, including Descartes who wrote about them in his La Géométrie, where the term was meant to be derogatory.Alberto A. Martinez, Negative Math: How Mathematical Rules Can Be Positively Bent (Princeton University Press, 2005), discusses ambiguities of meaning in imaginary expressions in historical context.
The number is the real part of the complex number, and is the imaginary part. Although Descartes originally used the term "imaginary number" to mean what is currently meant by the term "complex number", the term "imaginary number" today usually means a complex number with a real part equal to , that is, a number of the form .
In this model, multiplication by corresponds to a reflection about the origin, i.e. a rotation of degrees about the origin. Multiplication by i corresponds to a -degree rotation in the "positive" direction (i.e. counter-clockwise), and the equation is interpreted as saying that if we apply -degree rotations about the origin, the net result is a single -degree rotation. Note that a -degree rotation in the "negative" direction (i.e. clockwise) also satisfies this interpretation. This reflects the fact that also solves the equation — see imaginary unit.
In electrical engineering and related fields, the imaginary unit is often written as to avoid confusion with a changing current, traditionally denoted by .
Imaginary numbers follow the same pattern. For most human tasks, real numbers (or even rational numbers) offer an adequate description of data, and imaginary numbers have no meaning; however, in many areas of science and mathematics, imaginary numbers (and complex numbers in general) are essential for describing reality. Imaginary numbers have essential concrete applications in a variety of sciences and related areas such as signal processing, control theory, electromagnetism, quantum mechanics, and cartography.
For example, in electrical engineering, when analyzing AC circuitry, the values for the electrical voltage (and current) are expressed as imaginary or complex numbers known as phasors. These are real voltages that can cause damage/harm to either humans or equipment even if their values contain no "real part".
Specifically, Euler's formula is used extensively to express signals (e.g., electromagnetic) that vary periodically over time as a combination of sine and cosine functions. Euler's formula accomplishes this more conveniently via an expression of exponential functions with imaginary exponents. Euler's formula states that, for any real number x,
Imaginární jednotka | Imaginære tal | Imaginäre Zahl | Φανταστικός αριθμός | Número imaginario | Nombre imaginaire pur | Número imaxinario | 허수 | Þvertala | Imaginair getal | 虚数単位 | Imaginær enhet | Liczby urojone | Número imaginário | Imaginära tal | கற்பனை எண் | 虚数 | 純虛數
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