Imagine your teacher once told you: “You can’t take the square root of a negative number.”
Then one day, math says: “Actually… yes you can.  Let’s just imagine it.” And thus, imaginary numbers were born.
They sound like fantasy, but imaginary numbers are very real—and they’ve transformed everything from electrical engineering to quantum physics.   Let’s step into this strange and beautiful world.

What Is an Imaginary Number?

It all starts with a problem:

What is:
No real number gives us a negative when squared. So, mathematicians invented a new number:
This little symbol “i” is the foundation of all imaginary numbers,  
Combine them with real numbers and you get complex numbers, like:
3 + 4i, −2 − i, 0 + i
These are called complex because they have two parts:  one real, one imaginary.

Are They Real or Not?

“Imaginary” might sound fake—but in math, it’s just a name.  Imaginary numbers are just as real as negative numbers once were. Think about it:

People once believed you couldn’t subtract a bigger number from a smaller one.  Negative numbers were “nonsense.” Later, square  roots  of negative  numbers  seemed impossible.  Now we use them to solve real-world problems. Imaginary numbers aren’t just weird—they’re useful.

Where Do We Use Imaginary Numbers?

You might be surprised how often they show up:

The Complex Plane: A New Way to See Numbers
With imaginary numbers, math steps into two dimensions:


So a number  like 3 + 4i becomes a point in this  2D space:  3 steps  right,  4 steps up. This “complex plane” turns math into geometry—where equations become curves, spirals and fractals.

Powers of i: The Magical Cycle
Imaginary numbers have a rhythm of their own:
i1  = i, i2  = −1, i3 = −i, i4  = 1, i5  = i (and so on…)
The powers of i repeat every 4 steps. It’s like the seasons of the math world.

A Real-World Superpower
Despite their name, imaginary numbers are real tools solving real problems in the real world. They help us:

Without imaginary numbers, we wouldn’t have modern electronics, quantum computing, or fractal art.

Conclusion: Why Imaginary Numbers Matter

Imaginary numbers may not be “real”—but they’re what make reality work.

Name: Govind Sir
Department: Maths Foundation
Narayana Jaipur Center (NIHQ)

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