IB Maths AA HL Topic 1 — Number & Algebra Paper 1 & 2 HL only ~9 min read

Exponential (Euler’s) Form

If polar form felt slick, exponential form is downright magical. The same content — modulus and argument — gets squashed into the compact expression z = re. The big surprise (and there’s no avoiding the surprise) is that the imaginary unit shows up in an exponent. Once you accept this, multiplication becomes “multiply moduli, add exponents” — which is just normal index laws. Powers become trivial. Roots become almost trivial. This is the form Euler discovered in the 18th century, and it’s the form you’ll use in nearly every advanced complex-number question. The big idea: the same “scale and rotate” picture, written in the cleanest possible notation.

📘 What you need to know

What is exponential form?

Exponential form takes the polar expression r(cos θ + i sin θ) and rewrites it using a single exponential:

Exponential (Euler’s) form z = re   where r = |z| and θ = arg(z) ✓ in the formula booklet

The connection between the two forms comes from Euler’s formula, one of the most surprising results in mathematics:

Euler’s formula — the bridge between the forms e = cos θ + i sin θ

So multiplying both sides by r gives re = r(cos θ + i sin θ) — the same complex number, just written two different ways.

🤔 Why is the imaginary unit in the exponent?

The proof goes through Maclaurin series (which you’ll meet in the calculus topic). When you expand ex, cos θ, and sin θ as infinite polynomials and substitute x = iθ into ex, the result simplifies exactly to cos θ + i sin θ. So Euler’s formula isn’t a definition — it’s a theorem, and a stunning one. For now, just accept it and use it.

The geometric picture

For any angle θ, the complex number e sits on the unit circle in the complex plane — at distance 1 from the origin, in direction θ. Multiplying by r stretches it out to distance r.

e^(iθ) traces the unit circle as θ varies
Re Im unit circle e⁰ = 1 e^(iπ/2) = i e^(iπ) = −1 e^(3iπ/2) = −i e^(iθ) θ e^(iθ) always has modulus 1; the angle θ alone determines its position on the unit circle

The four green dots above are the special values you must commit to memory — they show up everywhere in HL exam questions. They’re just the four “compass points” of the unit circle:

θ = 0
e0 = 1
on the positive real axis
θ = π/2
eiπ/2 = i
on the positive imaginary axis
θ = π
e = −1
on the negative real axis
Generalisation:   e2kπi = 1 for any integer k, because adding a full revolution (2π) brings you back to the starting point on the unit circle. Useful for simplifying powers like e10πi = (e2πi)5 = 15 = 1.

Euler’s identity — the most beautiful equation

The special value e = −1 can be rearranged to give what many mathematicians call the most elegant equation ever written:

Euler’s Identity e + 1 = 0
Look at what’s in this single equation: e (the base of natural logarithms), i (the imaginary unit), π (the circle constant), 1 (the multiplicative identity), and 0 (the additive identity). Five fundamental constants from completely different parts of mathematics, linked by a single equation. That’s why people call it beautiful — and why it’s a regular feature of HL Paper 1 multiple-choice and short-answer questions.

Multiplication and division — index laws apply

Here’s the killer feature of exponential form. Because the i lives in the exponent, the rules of indices that you’ve used since GCSE work directly. That’s it — no special rules to memorise, just regular index manipulation.

Multiplication
r1r2ei(θ12)
moduli multiply, exponents add (as always with indices)
Division
(r1/r2)ei(θ1−θ2)
moduli divide, exponents subtract

Same rule as polar form, just expressed using e notation. If you’re confident with polar form, you already know how to multiply and divide in exponential form.

Powers in exponential form

This is where exponential form really earns its keep. To raise a complex number to a power, just use the index law (ea)b = eab:

Powers (re)n = rneinθ

So squaring multiplies the modulus by itself and doubles the argument. Cubing cubes the modulus and triples the argument. And so on. This pattern is essentially De Moivre’s theorem, which you’ll meet in detail in the next few notes.

Negative and fractional powers:   the same rule works. (re)−1 = (1/r)e−iθ, and (re)1/2 = √r · eiθ/2. This one-line approach is dramatically faster than expanding (a+bi)n for large n.

Worked examples

WE 1

Convert Cartesian to exponential form

Express z = 2 + 2i in exponential (Euler’s) form, with the argument in the range −π < θ ≤ π.

Step 1: Sketch — z is in Q1 argument will be positive acute Step 2: Modulus by Pythagoras |z| = √(2² + 2²) = √8 = 2√2 Step 3: Argument arg(z) = arctan(2/2) = arctan(1) = π/4 Step 4: Write in exponential form z = 2√2 · e^(iπ/4) just bundle the modulus and argument into r·e^(iθ) — same numbers as polar form
WE 2

Multiplication in exponential form

Let z1 = 4eiπ/3 and z2 = 5eiπ/6. Find z1z2 in exponential form.

Step 1: Multiply the moduli 4 · 5 = 20 Step 2: Add the exponents (using index laws) e^(iπ/3) · e^(iπ/6) = e^(i(π/3 + π/6)) π/3 + π/6 = 2π/6 + π/6 = 3π/6 = π/2 Step 3: Combine z₁z₂ = 20 · e^(iπ/2) notice this equals 20i, since e^(iπ/2) = i — the geometric meaning is “rotate to imaginary axis”
WE 3

Division in exponential form

Let z1 = 18ei(5π/6) and z2 = 6ei(π/4). Find z1/z2 in exponential form, with the argument in the range −π < θ ≤ π.

Step 1: Divide moduli 18 / 6 = 3 Step 2: Subtract exponents 5π/6 − π/4 = 10π/12 − 3π/12 = 7π/12 Step 3: Check range and write answer 7π/12 is in (−π, π] ✓ z₁/z₂ = 3 · e^(i·7π/12) cleaner than dividing in Cartesian form — no conjugate needed
WE 4

A power of a complex number

Given z = 3eiπ/5, find z4 in exponential form, with the argument in the range −π < θ ≤ π.

Step 1: Apply the power rule (index laws) z⁴ = (3e^(iπ/5))⁴ = 3⁴ · e^(i·4π/5) Step 2: Compute the modulus 3⁴ = 81 Step 3: Check the argument is in range 4π/5 ≈ 2.513,   π ≈ 3.142 → in range ✓ z⁴ = 81 · e^(i·4π/5) same calculation in Cartesian would mean expanding (a+bi)⁴ — this is dramatically faster
WE 5

Using the special values

Simplify each of the following:
(a) e5πi   (b) 4e + 4   (c) ei·9π/2

Part (a): split off multiples of 2π e^(5πi) = e^(4πi) · e^(πi) = 1 · (−1) (a) e^(5πi) = −1 Part (b): use Euler’s identity e^(iπ) = −1 4 · e^(iπ) + 4 = 4(−1) + 4 = −4 + 4 = 0 (b) 4e^(iπ) + 4 = 0 Part (c): split off 4π 9π/2 = 4π + π/2 e^(i·9π/2) = e^(4πi) · e^(iπ/2) = 1 · i (c) e^(i·9π/2) = i always strip out multiples of 2π (or 2πi) — they vanish, leaving a small angle
WE 6

Combined operations

Let z1 = 2eiπ/4 and z2 = 3eiπ/12. Find (z1)3 · z2 in exponential form.

Step 1: Cube z₁ first using the power rule z₁³ = 2³ · e^(i·3π/4) = 8 · e^(i·3π/4) Step 2: Multiply by z₂ moduli: 8 · 3 = 24 exponents add: 3π/4 + π/12 common denominator 12: 9π/12 + π/12 = 10π/12 = 5π/6 Step 3: Check range and combine 5π/6 is in (−π, π] ✓ z₁³ · z₂ = 24 · e^(i·5π/6) complex number arithmetic at this level is just index laws + a check on the range — no expanding needed

💡 Top tips

⚠ Common mistakes

Exponential form is genuinely the most elegant of the three notations — and once you’ve got it under your fingers, you’ll use it for nearly every advanced complex-number problem. The next note ties all three forms together: Cartesian, polar, and exponential, and shows you how to flip between them as needed. After that comes the truly powerful stuff: De Moivre’s theorem, complex roots, and roots of unity. Exponential form is the engine that makes those topics tractable.

Need help with Exponential Form?

Get 1-on-1 help from an IB examiner who knows exactly what Paper 1 & 2 are looking for.

Book Free Session →