Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

What is the principal value of (1+i)^i ?

Principal value

3 Answers

Relevance
  • Favorite Answer

    You should note that raising to an imaginary power is defined by

    .. iΘ

    e.....= cosΘ + i sin Θ

    and

    ..a + iΘ.........a.....iΘ.........a

    e.............= e....e.......= e (cosΘ + i sin Θ)

    The famous special case is

    ..iπ

    e.....= -1

    so

    ......... i

    (1 + i)

    is analyzed by noting

    1 + i

    is a complex number with

    ....................._.....___

    magnitude √2 =√1 +1

    and direction 45° which is π/4

    so it equals

    √2 [ cos π/4 + i sin π/4 ]

    Now we wish to raise this number to the i

    power. i = i times 1

    Let us convert EVERYTHING to powers of e

    ............(ln2)/2

    √2 = e

    .........................................I(π/4)

    cos (π/4 )+i sin (π/4) = e

    Now

    .........i

    (1 + i)

    equals

    .........................................i

    [√2 [ cos π/4+ i sin π/4 ] ]

    equals

    ......I..............................i

    (√2) (cosπ/4+ i sinπ/4 ]

    equals

    ..........i(ln2)/2......i²(π/4)

    = e...................e

    .....-π/4......iln2/2

    = e...........e

    Approximate value for

    e^( -π/4) is 0.455938128

    ....i(½ln2)

    e = cos (ln2/2) + I sin(ln2/2)

    arguments of cos and sin are in radians

    These calculate to

    approximately

    0.940542105 + 0.339677125 i

    Multiply the above expression by

    ..-π/4

    e which is approximately 0.455938128

    and we obtain

    = 0.428829006 + 0.154871752 i

    matching the calculations of Wolfram Alpha and other utilities.

    Additional Note:

    This value is the principal value as it is the ONLY {or unique} value for

    .......i

    (1+i)

  • 6 years ago

    There s a shorter way to get the principal value here. z^w for complex numbers z,w is actually defined as exp[w log(z)]. The complex exp function is single-valued:

    exp(u + iv) = (e^u)(cos v + i sin v)

    ....where e^u, cos v and sin v are the usual functions of real numbers.

    The principal value for z^w is defined as that expression using the principal value for log(z). Namely:

    log(z) = ln(|z|) + i Arg(z)

    ... where ln(|z|) is the natural logarithm of the real number |z|, and Arg(z) is the "argument" angle of z in polar form, in the interval (-π, π].

    Knowing that, the answer can be found with:

    Arg(1+i) = π/4

    |1 + i| = √2

    log(1+i) = ln(√2) + iπ/4 = (ln 2)/2 + iπ/4

    (1 + i)^i = exp(i log(1 + i)) = exp( i*[(ln 2)/2 + iπ/4]

    The rest is simplification.

    = exp(-π/4 + i[ln 2]/2)

    = e^(-π/4)*{cos [ln(2) / 2] + i sin [ln(2) / 2]}

    On a calculator, you ll get the approximations given, but this is exact. Another form might be:

    = [cos(ln(√2)) / e^(π/4)] + i [sin(ln(√2)) / e^(π/4)]

    ...to save keystrokes on a calculator with a square root button.

  • ?
    Lv 6
    8 years ago

    0.428829006294368+0.154871752464247i

    ..although I don't know how it was calculated

    see http://www.mathsisfun.com/numbers/complex-number-c...

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.