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Dual number
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==Division== Division of dual numbers is defined when the real part of the denominator is non-zero. The division process is analogous to [[Complex number|complex division]] in that the denominator is multiplied by its conjugate in order to cancel the non-real parts. Therefore, to evaluate an expression of the form :<math>\frac{a + b\varepsilon}{c + d\varepsilon}</math> we multiply the numerator and denominator by the conjugate of the denominator: :<math>\begin{align} \frac{a + b\varepsilon}{c + d\varepsilon} &= \frac{(a + b\varepsilon)(c - d\varepsilon)}{(c + d\varepsilon)(c - d\varepsilon)}\\[5pt] &= \frac{ac - ad\varepsilon + bc\varepsilon - bd\varepsilon^2}{c^2 + cd\varepsilon - cd\varepsilon - d^2\varepsilon^2}\\[5pt] &= \frac{ac - ad\varepsilon + bc\varepsilon - 0}{c^2 - 0}\\[5pt] &= \frac{ac + \varepsilon(bc - ad)}{c^2}\\[5pt] &= \frac{a}{c} + \frac{bc - ad}{c^2}\varepsilon \end{align}</math> which is defined [[Division by zero|when {{mvar|c}} is non-zero]]. If, on the other hand, {{mvar|c}} is zero while {{mvar|d}} is not, then the equation :<math>{a + b\varepsilon = (x + y\varepsilon) d\varepsilon} = {xd\varepsilon + 0}</math> # has no solution if {{mvar|a}} is nonzero # is otherwise solved by any dual number of the form {{math|{{sfrac|''b''|''d''}} + ''yΞ΅''}}. This means that the non-real part of the "quotient" is arbitrary and division is therefore not defined for purely nonreal dual numbers. Indeed, they are (trivially) [[zero divisors]] and clearly form an [[ideal (ring theory)|ideal]] of the associative [[Algebra over a field|algebra]] (and thus [[Ring (mathematics)|ring]]) of the dual numbers.
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