In Exercises 1–10, perform the indicated operations and write the result in standard form. (7 + 8i)(7 − 8i)
Ch. 5 - Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates and Parametric Equations

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Blitzer 3rd Edition
Ch. 5 - Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates and Parametric Equations
Problem 5.3.65
Blitzer 3rd Edition
Ch. 5 - Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates and Parametric Equations
Problem 5.3.65Chapter 5, Problem 5.3.65
In Exercises 59–74, convert each polar equation to a rectangular equation. Then use a rectangular coordinate system to graph the rectangular equation. r = 4 csc θ
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Recall the relationship between polar and rectangular coordinates: \(x = r \cos \theta\) and \(y = r \sin \theta\). Also, \(r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}\).
Given the polar equation \(r = 4 \csc \theta\), rewrite \(\csc \theta\) in terms of sine: \(\csc \theta = \frac{1}{\sin \theta}\), so the equation becomes \(r = \frac{4}{\sin \theta}\).
Multiply both sides of the equation by \(\sin \theta\) to get \(r \sin \theta = 4\).
Substitute \(r \sin \theta\) with \(y\) (from the coordinate relationships), resulting in the rectangular equation \(y = 4\).
Interpret the rectangular equation \(y = 4\) as a horizontal line crossing the y-axis at 4, which can be graphed on the rectangular coordinate system.

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Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Polar and Rectangular Coordinate Systems
Polar coordinates represent points using a radius and an angle (r, θ), while rectangular coordinates use (x, y) positions on a plane. Understanding how these systems relate is essential for converting equations and graphing accurately.
Recommended video:
Intro to Polar Coordinates
Conversion Formulas Between Polar and Rectangular Coordinates
Key formulas include x = r cos θ, y = r sin θ, r² = x² + y², and tan θ = y/x. These allow transformation of polar equations into rectangular form by substituting r and θ with expressions involving x and y.
Recommended video:
Convert Points from Polar to Rectangular
Trigonometric Functions and Their Reciprocal Identities
The cosecant function, csc θ, is the reciprocal of sin θ (csc θ = 1/sin θ). Recognizing this helps rewrite the given polar equation r = 4 csc θ in terms of sine, facilitating substitution and conversion to rectangular coordinates.
Recommended video:
Fundamental Trigonometric Identities
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