Natural Numbers
or “Counting Numbers”
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, . . .
- The use of three dots at the end of the list is a common mathematical notation to indicate that the list keeps going forever.
Whole Numbers
Natural Numbers together with “zero”
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, . . .
About the Number Zero
What is zero? Is it a number?
How can the number of nothing be a number? Is zero nothing, or is it
something?
Well, before this starts to
sound like a Zen koan, let’s look at how we use the numeral “0.” Arab and
Indian scholars were the first to use zero to develop the place-value number
system that we use today. When we write a number, we use only the ten
numerals 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. These numerals can stand for ones,
tens, hundreds, or whatever depending on their position in the number. In
order for this to work, we have to have a way to mark an empty place in a
number, or the place values won’t come out right. This is what the numeral
“0” does. Think of it as an empty container, signifying that that place is
empty. For example, the number 302 has 3 hundreds, no tens, and 2 ones.
So is zero a number? Well, that
is a matter of definition, but in mathematics we tend to call it a duck if it
acts like a duck, or at least if it’s behavior is mostly duck-like. The
number zero obeys most of the same rules of arithmetic that ordinary
numbers do, so we call it a number. It is a rather special number, though,
because it doesn’t quite obey all the same laws as other numbers—you can’t
divide by zero, for example.
Note for math purists: In the
strict axiomatic field development of the real numbers, both 0 and 1 are
singled out for special treatment. Zero is the additive identity,
because adding zero to a number does not change the number. Similarly, 1 is
the multiplicative identity because multiplying a number by 1 does not
change it.
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Integers
Whole numbers plus negatives
. . . –4, –3, –2, –1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .
About Negative Numbers
How can you have less than
zero? Well, do you have a checking account? Having less than zero means that
you have to add some to it just to get it up to zero. And if you take more
out of it, it will be even further less than zero, meaning that you will have
to add even more just to get it up to zero.
The strict mathematical
definition goes something like this:
For every real number n,
there exists its opposite, denoted – n, such that the sum of n
and – n is zero, or
n + (– n) = 0
Note that the negative sign in
front of a number is part of the symbol for that number: The symbol “–3” is
one object—it stands for “negative three,” the name of the number that is
three units less than zero.
The number zero is its own
opposite, and zero is considered to be neither negative nor positive.
Read the discussion of
subtraction for more about the meanings of the symbol “–.”
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Rational Numbers
All numbers of the form , where a and b are integers (but b cannot be zero)Rational numbers include what we usually call fractions
- Notice that the word “rational” contains the word “ratio,” which should remind you of fractions.
The
bottom of the fraction is called the denominator. Think of it as
the denomination—it tells you what size fraction we are talking about:
fourths, fifths, etc.
The
top of the fraction is called the numerator. It tells you how
many fourths, fifths, or whatever.
- RESTRICTION: The denominator cannot be zero! (But the numerator can)
If the numerator is zero, then the whole fraction
is just equal to zero. If I have zero thirds or zero fourths, than I don’t have
anything. However, it makes no sense at all to talk about a fraction measured
in “zeroths.”
- Fractions can be numbers smaller than 1, like 1/2 or 3/4 (called proper fractions), or they can be numbers bigger than 1 (called improper fractions), like two-and-a-half, which we could also write as 5/2
All integers can also be
thought of as rational numbers, with a denominator of 1:
Now it might seem as though the set of rational numbers would cover every possible case, but that is not so. There are numbers that cannot be expressed as a fraction, and these numbers are called irrational because they are not rational.
Irrational Numbers
- Cannot be expressed as a ratio of integers.
- As decimals they never repeat or terminate (rationals always do one or the other)
Examples:
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Rational (terminates) |
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Rational (repeats) |
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Rational (repeats) |
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Rational (repeats) |
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Irrational (never repeats or terminates) |
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Irrational (never repeats or terminates) |
More on Irrational Numbers
It might seem that the rational
numbers would cover any possible number. After all, if I measure a length
with a ruler, it is going to come out to some fraction—maybe 2 and 3/4
inches. Suppose I then measure it with more precision. I will get something
like 2 and 5/8 inches, or maybe 2 and 23/32 inches. It seems that however
close I look it is going to be some fraction. However, this is not
always the case.
Congratulations! You have just
drawn a length that cannot be measured by any rational number. According to
the Pythagorean Theorem, the length of this diagonal is the square root of 2;
that is, the number which when multiplied by itself gives 2.
According to my calculator,
But my calculator only stops at
eleven decimal places because it can hold no more. This number actually goes
on forever past the decimal point, without the pattern ever terminating or
repeating.
This is because if the pattern
ever stopped or repeated, you could write the number as a fraction—and it can
be proven that the square root of 2 can never be written as
for any choice of
integers for a and b. The proof of this was considered quite
shocking when it was first demonstrated by the followers of Pythagoras 26
centuries ago.
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The Real Numbers
- Rationals + Irrationals
- All points on the number line
- Or all possible distances on the number line
An Ordered Set
The real numbers have the property that they are ordered, which means that given any two different numbers we can always say that one is greater or less than the other. A more formal way of saying this is:For any two real numbers a and b, one and only one of the following three statements is true:
1.
a is less than b, (expressed as a < b)
2.
a is equal to b, (expressed as a = b)
3.
a is greater than b, (expressed as a > b)
The Number Line
The ordered nature of the real numbers lets us arrange them along a line (imagine that the line is made up of an infinite number of points all packed so closely together that they form a solid line). The points are ordered so that points to the right are greater than points to the left:- Every real number corresponds to a distance on the number line, starting at the center (zero).
- Negative numbers represent distances to the left of zero, and positive numbers are distances to the right.
- The arrows on the end indicate that it keeps going forever in both directions.
Absolute Value
When we want to talk about how “large” a number is without regard as to whether it is positive or negative, we use the absolute value function. The absolute value of a number is the distance from that number to the origin (zero) on the number line. That distance is always given as a non-negative number.In short:
- If a number is positive (or zero), the absolute value function does nothing to it:
- If a number is negative, the absolute value function makes it positive:
(WRONG)
The correct result is
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