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Unitary Amicable Numbers - American Mathematical Society

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Math Book - Riverside Secondary School

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... F2m+2 ~~ 1 contains respectively (on the basis of the inductive assumptions) m and m + 7 terms. If to these decompositions we add on the left-hand side the term F2m+3 we obtain the correct decomposition of numbers F 2m+4 ~ 2 and F2m+4 ~ ?• These latter contain respectively m + 1 and m + 2 terms. Fro ...
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1. What is the standard form of a quadratic equation?

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Homology and cohomology theories on manifolds

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Ch. 7.4, 7.6, 7.7: Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates, Parametric

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TOPOLOGY FINAL 1. Hausdorff Spaces Let X be a Hausdorff space

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... Carl Gauss, every n th order polynomial equation with complex (which includes real) coefficients, has exactly n (included repeated) roots which are all complex (which includes real numbers). This shows there is no need to extend number systems beyond the complex numbers to larger number fields insof ...
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local version - University of Arizona Math

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Math 236H Final exam

< 1 ... 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 ... 480 >

Fundamental theorem of algebra

The fundamental theorem of algebra states that every non-constant single-variable polynomial with complex coefficients has at least one complex root. This includes polynomials with real coefficients, since every real number is a complex number with an imaginary part equal to zero.Equivalently (by definition), the theorem states that the field of complex numbers is algebraically closed.The theorem is also stated as follows: every non-zero, single-variable, degree n polynomial with complex coefficients has, counted with multiplicity, exactly n roots. The equivalence of the two statements can be proven through the use of successive polynomial division.In spite of its name, there is no purely algebraic proof of the theorem, since any proof must use the completeness of the reals (or some other equivalent formulation of completeness), which is not an algebraic concept. Additionally, it is not fundamental for modern algebra; its name was given at a time when the study of algebra was mainly concerned with the solutions of polynomial equations with real or complex coefficients.
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