Geometrically, imaginary numbers are found on the vertical axis of the
complex number plane, which allows them to be presented
perpendicular to the real axis. One way of viewing imaginary numbers is to consider a standard
number line positively increasing in magnitude to the right and negatively increasing in magnitude to the left. At 0 on the -axis, a -axis can be drawn with "positive" direction going up; "positive" imaginary numbers then increase in magnitude upwards, and "negative" imaginary numbers increase in magnitude downwards. This vertical axis is often called the "imaginary axis". In this representation, multiplication by corresponds to a counterclockwise
rotation of 90 degrees about the origin, which is a quarter of a circle. Multiplication by corresponds to a clockwise rotation of 90 degrees about the origin. Similarly, multiplying by a purely imaginary number , with a real number, both causes a counterclockwise rotation about the origin by 90 degrees and scales the answer by a factor of . When , this can instead be described as a clockwise rotation by 90 degrees and a scaling by . ==Square roots of negative numbers==