Yeah thanks, but how would you know you had to add.
this is a nice Q
This is a nice solution.
this is a nice Q
Ok. I tried taking modulus and I realised I couldn't get it.
The question was.
If
Prove
Man, are you a genius?
=$Man, are you a genius?
I'm stuck on another question
I've proved that if
then it's an equilateral triangle.
But I need help to show
You've posted this question already...although this disguises it quite nicely.I'm stuck on another question
I've proved that if
then it's an equilateral triangle.
But I need help to show
I worked out a way to do your first question, but I don't know how to describe it in part. The only clue I can give is that at starts out as a circle geometric proof, and by playing with Arguments, turns algebraic. Tell me if you want to see it.
Well, I don't know how to draw a diagram here, so I'll have to describe it for you.
Draw your circle through O, predominantly in the first quadrant. Let A, B, C represent z1, z2, z3 respectively. For ease of describing, draw O, A, B, C in clockwise order (and in left to right order), all in the first quadrant. (The same logic works if they are drawn otherwise.) Produce AB to D.
Angle AOC = arg z1 - arg z3.
Angle CBD = arg (z1 - z2) - arg (z2 - z3)
(Tell me if you don't get that)
So arg (z1 - z2) - arg (z2 - z3) = arg z1 - arg z2 [ext angle of cyclic quad = opp int angle]
Rearrange:
arg(z1 - z2) - arg z1 = arg (z2 - z3) - arg z3
Add in the same 'fudge factor' on both sides of the =:
arg (z1 - z2) - arg z1 - arg z2 = arg (z2 - z3) - arg z3 - arg z2
Can you see that it is now proved?