How can De Moivre's theorem be described? What is the scope of this theorem? Give
two examples for roots and two examples for powers.
The theorem was formally stated by Abraham De Moivre (1667 -1754) in 1730 but the
concept was already known to many by at least 1710. The fundamental processes of algebra
employ the popular mathematical operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division
together with powers, and the extraction of roots. De Moivre's theorem allows these
mathematical operations to be applied to complex numbers. Complex numbers can be seen as
an extension of the real number system as all real numbers can be expressed as a complex
number (Verdun, 2013).
De Moivre theorem is a very useful theorem in the Mathematical fields of complex numbers.
It allows complex numbers in the polar form to be easily raised to certain powers (AoPs,
2020). It states that for D-A
The scope of this theorem computes positive powers of a complex number, computes nth
roots of a complex number, proves trigonometric identities, solves differential equations, and
finds the sum of the infinite series.
The proof of de Moivre’s theorem by induction is called root. D- B the cause would be true.
D1
These examples propose a common rule valid for all powers of z, or n. We proposed this rule
and assume its validity for all n without formal proof, leaving that for later studies. The
general rule for raising a complex number in the polar form to power is called De Moivre’s
Theorem and has important applications in engineering, particularly circuit analysis (CK-12
Foundation, 2020).
D2
D3
two examples for roots and two examples for powers.
The theorem was formally stated by Abraham De Moivre (1667 -1754) in 1730 but the
concept was already known to many by at least 1710. The fundamental processes of algebra
employ the popular mathematical operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division
together with powers, and the extraction of roots. De Moivre's theorem allows these
mathematical operations to be applied to complex numbers. Complex numbers can be seen as
an extension of the real number system as all real numbers can be expressed as a complex
number (Verdun, 2013).
De Moivre theorem is a very useful theorem in the Mathematical fields of complex numbers.
It allows complex numbers in the polar form to be easily raised to certain powers (AoPs,
2020). It states that for D-A
The scope of this theorem computes positive powers of a complex number, computes nth
roots of a complex number, proves trigonometric identities, solves differential equations, and
finds the sum of the infinite series.
The proof of de Moivre’s theorem by induction is called root. D- B the cause would be true.
D1
These examples propose a common rule valid for all powers of z, or n. We proposed this rule
and assume its validity for all n without formal proof, leaving that for later studies. The
general rule for raising a complex number in the polar form to power is called De Moivre’s
Theorem and has important applications in engineering, particularly circuit analysis (CK-12
Foundation, 2020).
D2
D3