Math, asked by jaswalishan2004, 9 months ago

polar form of complex number is​

Answers

Answered by radhikasharma2307
3

Step-by-step explanation:

A complex number z in polar form is given as r(cosθ+isinθ) and is often abbreviated as rcisθ, where r equals the modulus of the complex number. The value θ is called the argument of z, denoted by arg(z). Note that r(cos(θ+2kπ)+isin(θ+2kπ)) represents the same complex number for every integer k.

HERE IS YOUR ANSWER

Answered by Anonymous
2

\huge \pink{ \underline{ \boxed{ \mathbb{answer}}}}

The polar form of a complex number is another way to represent a complex number. The form z=a+bi is called the rectangular coordinate form of a complex number. The horizontal axis is the real axis and the vertical axis is the imaginary axis.

Similar questions