IB Maths AI HL Complex Numbers Paper 1 & 2 Complex plane ~6 min read

Introduction to Argand Diagrams

A complex number has two parts — so it can be drawn on a 2D grid. The Argand diagram turns every complex number into a point, or an arrow, on the complex plane: algebra becomes geometry.

📘 What you need to know

The complex plane

The complex plane, also called the Argand plane, is a 2D grid that works just like Cartesian coordinates — but the two axes carry the two parts of a complex number. The horizontal axis is the real axis, labelled Re, and the vertical axis is the imaginary axis, labelled Im.

Any complex number z = x + yi has a real part x and an imaginary part y, so it locates a single point on this plane — the same way (x, y) locates a point on an ordinary grid.

Plotting complex numbers: points and vectors

An Argand diagram is a geometrical picture of complex numbers on the complex plane. The number z = x + yi can be represented in two equivalent ways: as the point (x, y), usually marked with a cross, or as a vector — an arrow from the origin (0, 0) pointing out to (x, y).

Complex numbers as points and vectors on the Argand diagram Re Im O −4−2 24 4i2i −2i−4i z₁ = 3 + 4i (as a vector) z₂ = −4 + 2i (as a point) z₃ = −3 − 3i z₄ = 2 − 4ireal part → horizontal position  ·  imaginary part → vertical position
Each complex number is placed by its real part (horizontal) and imaginary part (vertical). z1 is drawn as a vector from the origin; z2, z3, z4 as points — both are valid.
Sketching tip: when a question says sketch an Argand diagram, you do not need graph paper or a full grid — a rough set of axes with the points in roughly the right places, clearly labelled, is enough.

Reading a diagram and the conjugate’s reflection

The process also runs in reverse: given a point on an Argand diagram, read off its horizontal coordinate as the real part and its vertical coordinate as the imaginary part to recover the complex number.

The diagram also makes the conjugate visual. Since z* = xyi keeps the real part but flips the imaginary part, z and z* are mirror images in the real axis. Likewise −z is z rotated 180° about the origin.

Argand representation z = x + yi  →  point (x, y) or vector from O distance from O = |z| = √(x² + y²) z* is the reflection of z in the real axis

🧭 Recipe — plotting a complex number on an Argand diagram

  1. Draw the complex plane: a horizontal real axis (Re) and a vertical imaginary axis (Im).
  2. Read off the parts of z = x + yi: real part x, imaginary part y.
  3. Move x along Re and y along Im to locate the point (x, y).
  4. Mark it — a cross for a point, or an arrow from the origin for a vector.
  5. Label the point with the complex number, and repeat for any others.

Worked examples

WE 1

Plotting points

State the coordinates and the quadrant for each number when plotted on an Argand diagram: z1 = 4 + 3i, z2 = −2 + 5i, z3 = −3 − 4i.

real part → x-coordinate, imaginary part → y-coordinate z₁ = 4 + 3i → (4, 3), x > 0, y > 0 z₂ = −2 + 5i → (−2, 5), x < 0, y > 0 z₃ = −3 − 4i → (−3, −4), x < 0, y < 0 z₁: quadrant 1 · z₂: quadrant 2 · z₃: quadrant 3 the signs of the two parts fix the quadrant straight away.
WE 2

Reading numbers off a diagram

On an Argand diagram, point A is at (−4, 6) and point B is at (5, 0). Write down the complex numbers represented by A and B.

x-coordinate → real part, y-coordinate → imaginary part A = (−4, 6) → −4 + 6i B = (5, 0) → 5 + 0i A = −4 + 6i · B = 5 B sits on the real axis — zero imaginary part means a purely real number.
WE 3

Identifying the quadrant

Without drawing axes, state which quadrant of the Argand diagram each number lies in: z1 = 7 − 2i, z2 = −5 − 8i, z3 = −1 + 6i.

check the sign of each part z₁: x > 0, y < 0 → quadrant 4 z₂: x < 0, y < 0 → quadrant 3 z₃: x < 0, y > 0 → quadrant 2 z₁: Q4 · z₂: Q3 · z₃: Q2 quadrants run anticlockwise from the top-right, exactly as in Cartesian work.
WE 4

The conjugate as a reflection

For z = 3 + 5i, write down z* and −z, and describe where each lies relative to z on an Argand diagram.

conjugate: keep real part, flip imaginary part z* = 3 − 5i negative: flip both parts −z = −3 − 5i z* = 3 − 5i · −z = −3 − 5i z* is z reflected in the real axis; −z is z rotated 180° about the origin.
WE 5

The length of the vector

The complex number z = −6 + 8i is drawn as a vector on an Argand diagram. Find the length of that vector.

vector length = distance from origin = |z| |z| = √(x² + y²) = √((−6)² + 8²) = √(36 + 64) = √100 length = 10 the vector’s length is just the modulus — geometry meets algebra.
WE 6

Full question: points on a diagram

Points P, Q, R represent zP = 2 + i, zQ = −3 + 4i, zR = −1 − 5i. (a) State the quadrant of each point. (b) Write down zQ* and state where it lies. (c) Find the distance of R from the origin.

(a) check signs of the parts P (2, 1) → Q1; Q (−3, 4) → Q2; R (−1, −5) → Q3 (b) conjugate of z_Q: flip imaginary part z_Q* = −3 − 4i — reflection of Q in the real axis (c) distance = |z_R| = √((−1)² + (−5)²) = √(1 + 25) = √26 (a) Q1, Q2, Q3 · (b) −3 − 4i (in Q3) · (c) √26 ≈ 5.10 reflecting Q in the real axis moves it from quadrant 2 down into quadrant 3.

💡 Top tips

âš  Common mistakes

That completes the Complex Numbers chapter — Cartesian form, the four operations, complex roots of quadratics, modulus & argument, and the Argand diagram. You can now move freely between a complex number’s algebra and its geometry.

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