Will Hunting
Member
These are the principles upon which you've based your reasoning, however, do not illustrate the exact conditions upon which your proof relies, respective to the question. You have solved the problem assuming the half-ray emanating from the P(2,0) has 0 ≤ arg(z-2) ≤ π/2, then solved the problem again assuming the half-ray emanating from the same P(2,0) has π/2 ≤ arg(z-2) ≤ π.Slide Rule said:Draw up a small Cartesian plane. Draw a ray at 45 degrees, it will be in the 1st quadrant, right?
1st quad, (x,y)=(+,+)
Its reflection will be -45 and in the 4th qudrant
4th quad reflection, (x,y)=(+,-)
Similar for 2nd and 3rd:
2nd quad: (x,y)=(-,+)
3rd quad relfection: (x,y)=(-,-)
So you apply this two the x and y components of each argument and can then remove the negative sign.
Hence, you have not divided the plane into four quadrants, but rather into two regions,
Re(z) ≥ 2,
Re(z) < 2
(The interface of these two regions gives values that satify both cases)
Your proof isn't false, though it seems you may have overshot in terms of length, perhaps including something that is just as comprehensively accounted for in Sirius' or Queenie's method (It's like proving a = b, then proving -a = -b; the algebraic deductions of above methods, as well as the behaviour of the resultant graph, show everything that you've shown)