If real numbers run on a left to right axis, imaginary numbers run up and down. They allow for negative answers to multiplication, for example -2 times -2 equals 4, but i2 times i2 equals -4. Scientists use these numbers to deal with difficult mathematics where real numbers won’t do the job, for example calculating the sum over histories of a particle.
Get the entire A Brief History of Time LitChart as a printable PDF.
"My students can't get enough of your charts and their results have gone through the roof." -Graham S.
Imaginary numbers/time Term Timeline in A Brief History of Time
The timeline below shows where the term Imaginary numbers/time appears in A Brief History of Time. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 8
...possible path. Scientists know how to measure this, but actually doing the math requires using imaginary numbers . This is a normal mathematical tool, by which numbers can be multiplied against themselves...
(full context)
To calculate sum over histories, one must use imaginary time , that is, imaginary numbers to represent time, which clears away any difference between space...
(full context)
...on toward the South Pole. The poles are not singularities in this model, which uses imaginary time as the axis from pole to pole, though they may seem like them in real...
(full context)
It seems, there might be no singularities in imaginary time , undoing Hawking’s earlier work. But, singularity theories showed gravity to be so powerful at...
(full context)
Chapter 9
To unify gravity with quantum mechanics, one must apply imaginary time . Imaginary time is no different from the dimensions of space. You can go back...
(full context)