Lesson 91: The Imaginary Unit 'i': Beyond the Real Line

Solving the Unsolvable

For centuries, mathematicians thought \(x^2 = -1\) had no solution. But by inventing a new number, \(i\) (the imaginary unit), we can expand our number system to solve every possible equation.

Definition: \(i = \sqrt{-1}\) and \(i^2 = -1\).

The Cycle of 'i'

The powers of \(i\) repeat every four steps:

Worked Examples

Example 1: Simplifying Radicals

Simplify \(\sqrt{-25}\).

Example 2: High Powers of 'i'

Find \(i^{15}\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In classical physics, imaginary numbers are just a "trick" to make math easier. But in Quantum Mechanics, they are real. The Schrödinger Equation contains an \(i\) right at the beginning: \(i\hbar \frac{\partial \psi}{\partial t} = \dots\). Without \(i\), we couldn't describe how waves oscillate. The imaginary unit is what allows a wavefunction to have both a "height" and a "phase" simultaneously. In the quantum world, "imaginary" numbers are the only way to describe "real" existence.