An imaginary tale : the story of [the square root of minus one] / Paul J. Nahin.
Material type: TextPublication details: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press , c1998.Description: xvi, 257 p. : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:- 0691127980
- Story of [the square root of minus one]
- Story of [square root] -1
- 515 NAH
- QA255 .N34 1998
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libro - Monografía | Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. | 515 NAH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 024072 |
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515 KUR Introducción al cálculo | 515 LAN Calculo | 515 LEI El calculo | 515 NAH An imaginary tale : the story of [the square root of minus one] | 515 PUR Calculo | 515 SMI Calculo | 515 SPI Matematicas avanzadas para ingenieria y ciencia |
On t.p. "[the square root of minus one]" appears as a radical over "-1".
Includes indexes.
Today complex numbers have such widespread practical use--from electrical engineering to aeronautics--that few people would expect the story behind their derivation to be filled with adventure and enigma. InAn Imaginary Tale, Paul Nahin tells the 2000-year-old history of one of mathematics' most elusive numbers, the square root of minus one, also known asi. He recreates the baffling mathematical problems that conjured it up, and the colorful characters who tried to solve them. In 1878, when two brothers stole a mathematical papyrus from the ancient Egyptian burial site in the Valley of Kings, they led scholars to the earliest known occurrence of the square root of a negative number. The papyrus offered a specific numerical example of how to calculate the volume of a truncated square pyramid, which implied the need fori. In the first century, the mathematician-engineer Heron of Alexandria encounteredIin a separate project, but fudged the arithmetic; medieval mathematicians stumbled upon the concept while grappling with the meaning of negative numbers, but dismissed their square roots as nonsense. By the time of Descartes, a theoretical use for these elusive square roots--now called "imaginary numbers"--was suspected, but efforts to solve them led to intense, bitter debates. The notoriousifinally won acceptance and was put to use in complex analysis and theoretical physics in Napoleonic times.
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