Hyperbolic functions, natural logs and complex numbers


By Nikhil Shah (P3372) on Sunday, December 10, 2000 - 02:27 pm :

Hi, I've tried several approaches to this question, but just kept on ending up with a ridiculous blurb of algebra! Could someone please help me?!

If u+iv = ln (x+iy+a / x+iy-a), prove that:

a) x2 + y2 -2axcothu + a2 = 0

b) x = (asinhu) / (coshu -cosv)

c) |x+iy|2 = a2 (coshu + cosv) / (coshu -cosv)


By Michael Doré (Md285) on Sunday, December 10, 2000 - 04:08 pm :

Hi,

I'm not quite sure I understand. Are x,y,u,v real? What about a - is that real or complex?


By Nikhil Shah (P3372) on Sunday, December 10, 2000 - 09:06 pm :

Well, all the letters used are real, since anything that is imaginary has already got an i in front of it. this is the question just as it is written out in the book, so I assume that this is the case - it make's sense!


By Kerwin Hui (Kwkh2) on Sunday, December 10, 2000 - 11:06 pm :

The substitution z=x+iy and w=u+iv should simplify a lot of the algebra. Obviously there is some manipulation....

Kerwin


By Kerwin Hui (Kwkh2) on Sunday, December 10, 2000 - 11:37 pm :

OK, I think I'll write a brief summary of what to do. Let z=x+iy, w=u+iv, we have w=ln [(z+a)/(z-a)]

Rearrange to get

z=a(ew +1)/(ew -1)

Recall: |z|2 =x2 +y2 =z z* , where z* is the complex conjugate of z.

So after a bit of algebra (about 4 lines), we have

|z|2 =a2 [(eu +e-u +eiv +e-iv )/(eu +e-u -eiv -e-iv )]

which is part c), as eiv +e-iv is 2cos v, etc.

Also, from z=a(ew +1)/(ew -1), we have

z=a{[eu -e-u -(eiv -e-iv )]/[eu +e-u -(eiv +e-iv )]}

which yields b) when you equate the real parts.

Now from c) and b) we get a).

Kerwin