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Whether you square a positive or a negative number, the answer is positive. It is impossible to square any number and get a negative answer.
So what is ? Since it asks the question “What number squared is –1?”, and since nothing squared ever gives the answer –1, we say that the question has no answer. More generally, we say that the domain of is all numbers such that . –1 is not in the domain.
However, it turns out that for a certain class of problems, it is useful to define a new kind of number that has the peculiar property that when you square them, you do get negative answers.
or, equivalently,
is referred to as an “imaginary number” because it cannot represent real quantities such as “the number of rocks” or “the length of a stick.” However, surprisingly, imaginary numbers can be useful in solving many real world problems!
I often like to think of as being like a science fiction story. Many science fiction stories are created by starting with one false premise, such as “time travel is possible” or “there are men on Mars,” and then following that premise logically to see where it would lead. With imaginary numbers, we start with the premise that “a number exists whose square is –1.” We then follow that premise logically, using all the established rules of math, to see where it leads.
"The imaginary number is a fine and wonderful resource of the human spirit, almost an amphibian between being and not being."
-Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
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