A page of two-dimensional arrays can be thought of as a three-dimensional array. Since 2-dimensional arrays are commonly expressed in tables or matrixes, therefore, if we put these tables or matrices in a page, the collection of matrices in a single page would now be structured into a 3D array.
Express √3 + i in polar form:
|√3 + i| = √((√3)² + 1²) = √4 = 2
arg(√3 + i) = arctan(1/√3) = π/6
Then
√3 + i = 2 (cos(π/6) + i sin(π/6))
By DeMoivre's theorem,
(√3 + i)³ = (2 (cos(π/6) + i sin(π/6)))³
… = 2³ (cos(3 • π/6) + i sin(3 • π/6))
… = 8 (cos(π/2) + i sin(π/2))
… = 8i
aww this is soo sweet!!
and yes I wouldn't be able to do it without u all loll
I think it would be 9, but the graph seems a bit unclear so I’m really sorry if that doesn’t help..
D 64 if this is right please give me brainlist