Difference between revisions of "Complex plane"

m (stub)
(fix)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''complex plane''' is one representation of the [[complex number]]s.  It is a [[coordinate plane]] with two perpendicular axes, the real axis (typically plotted as the horizontal axis) and the imaginary axis (typically plotted as the vertical axis).  Any [[complex number]] <math>z</math> can be plotted on it, with the [[real part]] <math>\mathrm{Re}(z)</math> as the real (horizontal) coordinate and the [[imaginary part]] <math>\mathrm{Im}(z)</math> as the imaginary (vertical) coordinate.  The intersection of the two axes (the [[origin]] of the coordinate system) corresponds to the complex number [[zero (constant) | 0]], while a point two units to the right and one unit down from the origin corresponds to the complex number <math>2 - i</math>.
+
The '''complex plane''' is one representation of the [[complex number]]s.  It is a [[coordinate plane]] with two perpendicular axes, the real axis (typically plotted as the horizontal axis) and the imaginary axis (typically plotted as the vertical axis).  Any [[complex number]] <math>z</math> can be plotted on it, with the [[real part]] <math>\mathrm{Re}(z)</math> as the real (horizontal) coordinate and the [[imaginary part]] <math>\mathrm{Im}(z)</math> as the imaginary (vertical) coordinate.  The intersection of the two axes (the [[origin]] of the coordinate system) corresponds to the complex number [[0]], while a point two units to the right and one unit down from the origin corresponds to the complex number <math>2 - i</math>.
  
=== See also ===
+
=== See Also ===
  
 
* [[Complex analysis]]
 
* [[Complex analysis]]

Latest revision as of 10:14, 15 February 2025

The complex plane is one representation of the complex numbers. It is a coordinate plane with two perpendicular axes, the real axis (typically plotted as the horizontal axis) and the imaginary axis (typically plotted as the vertical axis). Any complex number $z$ can be plotted on it, with the real part $\mathrm{Re}(z)$ as the real (horizontal) coordinate and the imaginary part $\mathrm{Im}(z)$ as the imaginary (vertical) coordinate. The intersection of the two axes (the origin of the coordinate system) corresponds to the complex number 0, while a point two units to the right and one unit down from the origin corresponds to the complex number $2 - i$.

See Also

This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.