Difference between revisions of "The Road to Reality Study Notes"
The Road to Reality Study Notes (view source)
Revision as of 06:05, 16 March 2020
, 06:05, 16 March 2020→Chapter 4
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== Chapter 4 == | == Chapter 4 == | ||
Penrose introduced the complex numbers, extending addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of the reals to the system obtained by adjoining i, the square root of -1. Polynomial equations can be solved by complex numbers, this property is called ''algebraic closure'' and follows from the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. | Penrose introduced the complex numbers, extending addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of the reals to the system obtained by adjoining i, the square root of -1. Polynomial equations can be solved by complex numbers, this property is called ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebraically_closed_field algebraic closure]'' and follows from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_theorem_of_algebra Fundamental Theorem of Algebra]. | ||
Complex numbers can be visualized graphically as a plane, where the horizontal coordinate gives the real coordinate of the number and the vertical coordinate gives the imaginary part. This helps understand the behavior of power series; for example, the power series | Complex numbers can be visualized graphically as a plane, where the horizontal coordinate gives the real coordinate of the number and the vertical coordinate gives the imaginary part. This helps understand the behavior of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radius_of_convergence power series]; for example, the power series | ||
$$1-x^2+x^4+\cdots$$ | $$1-x^2+x^4+\cdots$$ | ||
converges to the function $$1/(1+x²)$$ only when $$|x|<1$$, despite the fact that the function doesn't seem to have "singular" behavior anywhere on the real line. This is explained by singularities at $$x=i,-i$$. | converges to the function $$1/(1+x²)$$ only when $$|x|<1$$, despite the fact that the function doesn't seem to have "singular" behavior anywhere on the real line. This is explained by singularities at $$x=i,-i$$. | ||
Finally, the Mandelbrot set is defined as the set of all points $$c$$ in the complex plane so that repeated applications of the transformation mapping $$z$$ to $$z^2+c$$, starting with $$z=0$$, do not escape to infinity. | Finally, the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set Mandelbrot set] is defined as the set of all points $$c$$ in the complex plane so that repeated applications of the transformation mapping $$z$$ to $$z^2+c$$, starting with $$z=0$$, do not escape to infinity. | ||
== Chapter 5 == | == Chapter 5 == |