Geometric interpretation of the multiplication of complex numbers? I've always been taught that one

rose2904ks

rose2904ks

Answered question

2022-06-13

Geometric interpretation of the multiplication of complex numbers?
I've always been taught that one way to look at complex numbers is as a Cartesian space, where the real part is the x component and the imaginary part is the y component.
In this sense, these complex numbers are like vectors, and they can be added geometrically like normal vectors can.
However, is there a geometric interpretation for the multiplication of two complex numbers?
I tried out two test ones, 3+i and −2+3i, which multiply to −9+7i. But no geometrical significance seems to be found.
Is there a geometric significance for the multiplication of complex numbers?

Answer & Explanation

marktje28

marktje28

Beginner2022-06-14Added 22 answers

Suppose we multiply the complex numbers z 1 and z 2 . If these numbers are written in the polar form as r 1 e i θ 1 and r 2 e i θ 2 , the product will be r 1 r 2 e i ( θ 1 + θ 2 ) .
Equivalently, we are stretching the first complex number z 1 by a factor equal to the magnitude of the second complex number z 2 and then rotating the stretched z1 counter-clockwise by an angle θ 2 to arrive at the product.
There are several websites that expand upon this intuition with graphics and more explanation.
skylsn

skylsn

Beginner2022-06-15Added 4 answers

Add the angles and multiply the lengths.

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