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# Angular Difference and Pythagorean Addition Angular relation is one important setting. A lone ultrareal has natural inner state $u$. When orientation is needed, an inner state may be presented as: $$ a=ue^{i\alpha}. $$ Its reverse-oriented presentation is: $$ a^*=ue^{-i\alpha}. $$ The returned density is $aa^*=u^2$. For two oriented presentations, $$ a=ue^{i\alpha},\qquad b=ve^{i\beta}, $$ their reverse-oriented presentations are: $$ a^*=ue^{-i\alpha},\qquad b^*=ve^{-i\beta}. $$ The relevant quantity is not either angle alone. It is their relative difference: $$ \Delta=\alpha-\beta. $$ The angular descriptor is: $$ d(U,V)=2uv\cos\Delta. $$ The resulting density is: $$ |a+b|^2 = (a+b)(a^*+b^*) =aa^*+ab^*+ba^*+bb^* =u^2+v^2+2uv\cos\Delta. $$ In this angular case, the interaction descriptor is: $$ d(U,V):=ab^*+ba^*=2uv\cos\Delta. $$ This is upper-case term-type-aware addition: $$ U+V=u^2+d(U,V)+v^2. $$ ## Aligned Difference When: $$ \Delta=0, $$ then: $$ \cos\Delta=1. $$ So: $$ U+V=(u+v)^2. $$ This is aligned addition. ## Orthogonal Difference When: $$ \Delta=\frac{\pi}{2}, $$ then: $$ \cos\Delta=0. $$ So: $$ U+V=u^2+v^2. $$ This is the Pythagorean case. The relation term vanishes. If: $$ c^2=u^2+v^2, $$ then: $$ c=\sqrt{u^2+v^2}. $$ The Pythagorean theorem is therefore recovered as zero angular relation. In ordinary geometry that condition is called orthogonality. ## Opposed Difference When: $$ \Delta=\pi, $$ then: $$ \cos\Delta=-1. $$ So: $$ U+V=(u-v)^2. $$ Opposition is a relative difference between positive inner magnitudes. It is not a negative ultrareal. ## Law Of Cosines The same expression recovers the law of cosines. For the sum of oriented inner states: $$ |u+ve^{i\Delta}|^2 =u^2+v^2+2uv\cos\Delta. $$ For the side opposite an angle $C$, the conventional triangle formula is: $$ c^2=u^2+v^2-2uv\cos C. $$ The sign difference is an orientation convention. The content is the same: the square-value depends on the relation between the parts. ## Euler's Formula The symbol $i$ can be introduced rigorously by adjoining it to the reals with the rule: $$ i^2=-1. $$ This gives the complex plane: $$ \mathbb C=\{a+bi\mid a,b\in\mathbb R\}. $$ Define the exponential, cosine, and sine by their convergent power series: $$ e^x=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{x^n}{n!}, $$ $$ \cos x=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}(-1)^n\frac{x^{2n}}{(2n)!}, $$ and: $$ \sin x=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}(-1)^n\frac{x^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}. $$ These series converge absolutely for every complex input, so separating the even and odd terms is legitimate. For real $\theta$: $$ \begin{aligned} e^{i\theta} &=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(i\theta)^n}{n!}\\ &=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(i\theta)^{2n}}{(2n)!} +\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(i\theta)^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}\\ &=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}(-1)^n\frac{\theta^{2n}}{(2n)!} +i\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}(-1)^n \frac{\theta^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}\\ &=\cos\theta+i\sin\theta. \end{aligned} $$ This is Euler's formula: $$ e^{i\theta}=\cos\theta+i\sin\theta. $$ At $\theta=\pi$: $$ e^{i\pi}=-1, $$ which gives the standard notation for complete opposition. At $\theta=\pi/2$: $$ e^{i\pi/2}=i. $$ Thus trigonometry is compatible with the ultrareal reading: angles describe how inner presentations differ before a positive square-value is evaluated, and the adjoined symbol $i$ gives a rigorous notation for those turns.
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