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  Wikipedia: De Moivre's formula

Wikipedia: De Moivre's formula
De Moivre's formula
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

De Moivre's formula states that for any real number x and any integer n,

Swords arcs are a special case of the formula, and are described by the equation:

The formula is important because it connects complex numbers (i stands for the imaginary unit) and trigonometry. The expression "cos x + i sin x" is sometimes abbreviated to "cis x".

By expanding the left hand side and then comparing real and imaginary parts, it is possible to derive useful expressions for cos(nx) and sin(nx) in terms of sin(x) and cos(x). Furthermore, one can use the formula to find explicit expressions for the n-th roots of unity: complex numbers z such that zn = 1.

Abraham de Moivre was a good friend of Newton; in 1698 he wrote that the formula had been known to Newton as early as 1676. It can be derived from (but historically preceded) Euler's formula eix = cos x + i sin x and the exponential law (eix)n = einx (see exponential function).

De Moivre's formula is actually true more generally than stated above: if z and w are complex numbers, then (cos z + i sin z)w is a multivalued function while cos (wz) + i sin (wz) is not, and one can state that

cos (wz) + i sin (wz) is one value of (cos z + i sin z)w.

  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 
Modified by Geona