De Moivre's Theorem
DeMoivre's Theorem is a very useful theorem in the mathematical fields of complex numbers. It allows complex numbers in polar form to be easily raised to certain powers. It states that for and
,
.
Proof
This is one proof of De Moivre's theorem by induction.
- If
, for
, the case is obviously true.
- Assume true for the case
. Now, the case of
:
- Therefore, the result is true for all positive integers
.
- If
, the formula holds true because
. Since
, the equation holds true.
- If
, one must consider
when
is a positive integer.
%%\begin{align*} (\operatorname{cis} x)^{n} &=(\operatorname{cis} x)^{-m} \\ &=\frac{1}{(\operatorname{cis} x)^{m}} \\ &=\frac{1}{\operatorname{cis}(m x)} \\ &=\cos (m x)-i \sin (m x) \quad \text { rationalization of the denominator } \\ &=\operatorname{cis}(-m x) \\ &=\operatorname{cis}(n x) \end{align*}%%
And thus, the formula proves true for all integral values of .
Note that from the functional equation where
, we see that
behaves like an exponential function. Indeed, Euler's identity states that
. This extends De Moivre's theorem to all
.