Jean Valjean
New member
- Joined
- May 15, 2021
- Messages
- 1
Hi everybody,
I have been given this two-part problem for homework, and I could complete the first part easily using either: 1) the Argand diagram to add the vectors geometrically, or 2) the formula for the sum of 5 terms of a geometric series.
For the second part though, I have no idea of where to even begin. I should mention that my teacher told me that this question is linked and that the answer to part a should in some way be used in part b...
The question goes :
Q) [MATH]z^5=1[/MATH] has roots [MATH]1, α, α^2, α^3, α^4[/MATH] where [MATH]α=cis(2π / 5)[/MATH]
a) Prove that [MATH]1+α+α^2+α^3+α^4=0[/MATH]
b) Solve [MATH]((z + 2)/(z - 1) )^5=1[/MATH], giving your answer in terms of α.
Thank you in advance and sorry if the formatting is not ideal.
I have been given this two-part problem for homework, and I could complete the first part easily using either: 1) the Argand diagram to add the vectors geometrically, or 2) the formula for the sum of 5 terms of a geometric series.
For the second part though, I have no idea of where to even begin. I should mention that my teacher told me that this question is linked and that the answer to part a should in some way be used in part b...
The question goes :
Q) [MATH]z^5=1[/MATH] has roots [MATH]1, α, α^2, α^3, α^4[/MATH] where [MATH]α=cis(2π / 5)[/MATH]
a) Prove that [MATH]1+α+α^2+α^3+α^4=0[/MATH]
b) Solve [MATH]((z + 2)/(z - 1) )^5=1[/MATH], giving your answer in terms of α.
Thank you in advance and sorry if the formatting is not ideal.
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