2 Counting Numbers
2 Counting Numbers
and so on.
So we have:
Counting Numbers: {1, 2, 3, ...}
And the "Counting Numbers" satisfied people for a long time.
Zero
The idea of zero, though natural to us now, was not natural to early humans ... if there is
nothing to count, how can you count it?
Example: you can count dogs, but you can't count an empty space:
An empty patch of grass is just an empty patch of grass!
Placeholder
But about 3,000 years ago people needed to tell the difference between numbers
like 4 and 40.Without the zero they look the same!
So they used a "placeholder", a space or special symbol, to show "there are no digits here"
52
The idea of zero had begun, but it wasn't for another thousand years or so that people
started thinking of it as an actual number.
But now we can think
"I had 3 oranges, then I ate the 3 oranges, now I have zero oranges...!"
depending on the subject. I guess they disagree on whether zero is "natural" or not.
Negative Numbers
But the history of mathematics is all about people asking questions, and seeking the
answers!
One of the good questions to ask is
"if you can go one way, can you go the opposite way?"
We can count forwards: 1, 2, 3, 4, ...
numbers:
Negative Cows?
And in theory you can have a negative cow!
Think about this ...If you had just sold two bulls, but can only find one to hand over to the
new owner... you actually have minus one bull ... you are in debt one bull!
So negative numbers exist, and we're going to need a new set of numbers to include them.
Integers
If we include the negative numbers with the whole numbers, we have a new set of
numbers that are called integers
Integers: {..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
The Integers include zero, the counting numbers, and the negative of the counting numbers,
to make a list of numbers that stretch in either direction indefinitely.
Fractions
If you have one orange and want to share it with someone, you need to cut it in half.
You have just invented a new type of number!
You took a number (1) and divided by another number (2) to come up with half (1/2)
The same thing happens when we have four biscuits (4) and want to share them among
three people (3) ... they get (4/3) biscuits each.
A new type of number, and a new name:
Rational Numbers
Any number that can be written as a fraction is called a Rational Number.
So, if "p" and "q" are integers (remember we talked about integers), then p/q is a rational
number.
Example: If p is 3 and q is 2, then:
p/q = 3/2 = 1.5 is a rational number
The only time this doesn't work is when q is zero, because dividing by zero is undefined.
Rational Numbers: {p/q : p and q are integers, q is not zero}
So half () is a rational number.
And 2 is a rational number also, because you could write it as 2/1
So, Rational Numbers include:
Irrational Numbers
So, the square root of 2 (2) is an irrational number. It is called irrational because it is not
rational (can't be made using a simple ratio of integers). It isn't crazy or anything, just not
rational.
And we know there are many more irrational numbers. Pi () is a famous one.
Useful
So irrational numbers are useful. You need them to
and more,
Real Numbers
That's right, another name!
Real Numbers include:
Imagine ...
The question is:
11 = 1,
"if you can imagine it, then you can play with it"
So, ...
Imaginary Numbers
... let us just imagine that the square root of minus one exists.
We can even give it a special symbol: the letter
And i has this interesting property that if you square it (ii) you get -1 which is back to being
a Real Number. In fact that is the correct definition:
Imaginary Number: A number whose square is a negative Real Number.
And i (the square root of -1) times any Real Number is an Imaginary Number. So these are
all Imaginary Numbers:
3i
-6i
0.05i
There are also many applications for Imaginary Numbers, for example in the fields of
electricity and electronics.
Complex Numbers
Yes, if you put a Real Number and an Imaginary Number together you get a new type of
number called a Complex Number and here are some examples:
3 + 2i
27.2 - 11.05i
A Complex Number has a Real Part and an Imaginary Part, but either one could be zero
So a Real Number is also a Complex Number (with an imaginary part of 0):
4 is a Complex Number (because it is 4 + 0i)
and likewise an Imaginary Number is also a Complex Number (with a real part of 0):
7i is a Complex Number (because it is 0 + 7i)
So the Complex Numbers include all Real Numbers and all Imaginary Numbers, and all
combinations of them.
Summary
Here they are again:
Type of Number
Counting Numbers
Whole Numbers
Integers
Rational Numbers
Irrational Numbers
Real Numbers
Imaginary Numbers
Complex Numbers
Quick Description
{1, 2, 3, ...}
{0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
{..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
p/q : p and q are integers, q is not zero
Not Rational
Rationals and Irrationals
Squaring them gives a negative Real Number
Combinations of Real and Imaginary Numbers