Map of content for the applied math that engineering builds on — the vector calculus and complex analysis that show up everywhere downstream. The path: complex numbers → vectors and coordinate systems → vector calculus (fields, line integrals, surface integrals, integral theorems) → complex analysis (analytic functions, contour integration, residues, conformal mapping).

Complex numbers

The number system that closes the algebra of polynomials and powers every transform method.

Vectors and coordinate systems

Geometric foundations for everything that follows.

Vector-valued functions

Curves in space — the path for line integrals.

Vector fields and differential operators

Functions that assign a vector (or scalar) to each point in space, and the operators that probe their local structure.

Line integrals

Integrating along a curve — work, circulation, flow.

Surface and flux integrals

Integrating over a surface.

Integral theorems

The grand identities linking derivatives over a region to values on its boundary.

Complex functions

Functions and the topology they live in.

Analytic functions and Cauchy-Riemann

Where complex analysis diverges from real calculus: complex differentiability is enormously restrictive.

Elementary complex functions

The standard functions extended to the complex plane, plus their new behaviors.

Contour integration

Integrating a complex function along a curve in .

  • Contour integral; the complex line integral.
  • ML estimate — bound ; the workhorse for showing integrals vanish.

Cauchy’s theorem and integral formula

The core results that make complex analysis what it is.

Series representations

Local expansions of analytic functions.

  • Power series and its radius of convergence.
  • Taylor series — power series of an analytic function around a regular point.
  • Laurent series — generalized expansion that allows negative powers, valid in an annulus around a singularity.

Singularities and residues

The classification of where analyticity fails, and how to integrate around it.

  • Isolated singularity — removable, pole, or essential.
  • Residue (complex analysis) — the Laurent coefficient.
  • Residue theorem — closed contour integral = times sum of enclosed residues; the practical engine of contour integration.
  • Jordan’s lemma — bounds for integrals on large semicircles; used to evaluate real Fourier-type integrals by closing in the complex plane.

Conformal mapping

Using analytic maps as geometric transformations.

  • Möbius transformation; the rational-linear maps.
  • Cross-ratio — the Möbius-invariant of four points.
  • Smith chart — the Möbius transformation used in RF engineering for impedance matching.
  • Riemann sphere — the one-point compactification of ; where Möbius maps are bijections.

The math here underwrites everything analytical in Differential equations and Signals and systems. The Laplace transform and Inverse Laplace transform are contour integrals — pole locations and residues are the inverse transform. Fourier transform inversion is the same machinery applied to vertical contours. Phasor analysis is just from Euler’s formula applied to steady-state AC circuits. The Smith chart used in transmission-line work is a Möbius transformation in disguise. Laplace’s equation from vector calculus is the equilibrium limit of the diffusion and wave PDEs that show up in fields and electromagnetics.