A Conversation for Imaginary Numbers
In Our Time
Hoovooloo Posted Oct 28, 2011
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss imaginary numbers. In the sixteenth century, a group of mathematicians in Bologna found a solution to a problem that had puzzled generations before them: a completely new kind of number. For more than a century this discovery was greeted with such scepticism that the great French thinker Rene Descartes dismissed it as an "imaginary" number.
The name stuck - but so did the numbers. Long dismissed as useless or even fictitious, the imaginary number i and its properties were first explored seriously in the eighteenth century. Today the imaginary numbers are in daily use by engineers, and are vital to our understanding of phenomena including electricity and radio waves.
With
Marcus du Sautoy
Professor of Mathematics at Oxford University
Ian Stewart
Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick
Caroline Series
Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick
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