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The Real Numbers All of the numbers that you are currently familiar with are part of the set of real numbers.

The Real Numbers

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The Real Numbers. All of the numbers that you are currently familiar with are part of the set of real numbers. Natural or Counting Numbers. Man first used numbers to keep track of sheep, goats and other countable possessions. The Natural or Counting Numbers are the ones you use to count. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Real Numbers

The Real Numbers

All of the numbers that you are currently familiar with are part of

the set of real numbers.

Page 2: The Real Numbers

Natural or Counting Numbers

Man first used numbers to keep track of sheep, goats and other countable possessions.

The Natural or Counting Numbers are the ones you use to count.

{ 1, 2, 3, …}

Page 3: The Real Numbers

Natural or Counting NumbersThere are no fractions or decimals in the counting

numbers.

You wouldn’t say you had three and a half sheep. You’d say you had 3 sheep and dinner!

Page 4: The Real Numbers

Whole NumbersOne day a very philosophical man contemplated the

question:

What number would I use if I had no sheep?

…and that was the birth of the number zero!

Page 5: The Real Numbers

Whole Numbers

The set of whole numbers are the counting numbers plus their new friend, zero

It is easy to remember which are the whole numbers because zero is the only number that looks like a hole!

When you see the word WHOLE, think “hole”

{ 0, 1, 2, …}

Page 6: The Real Numbers

The Integers

Next, someone invented checking accounts and within the hour someone had to invent the negative numbers!

The integers are the negative counting numbers and the whole numbers (still no fractions or decimals).

{…-2, -1, 0, 1, 2, …}

Page 7: The Real Numbers

The Rational Numbers

The word ratio means fraction.

Therefore rational numbers are any numbers which can be written as fractions.

2

3

3

4

5

1

1

5

Page 8: The Real Numbers

Integers are Rational Numbers

Like the 5 in our example, any integer can be made into a fraction by putting it over 1. Since it can be a fraction, it

is a rational number.

2

3

3

4

5

1

1

5

Page 9: The Real Numbers

Changing fractions to decimals

It’s easy to change a fraction to a decimal, so rational numbers can also be written as decimals.

Rational numbers convert to two different types of decimals:

Terminating decimals – which end

Repeating decimals – which repeat

Page 10: The Real Numbers

Terminating decimals

To convert a fraction to a decimal, divide the top by the bottom.

To convert ½ to a decimal you would do:

There is no remainder. The answer just ends – or terminates.

.52 1.0

Page 11: The Real Numbers

Repeating decimals

To convert a fraction to a decimal, divide the top by the bottom.

To convert 1/3 to a decimal you would do:

=

There is a remainder. The answer just keeps repeating.

.3333 1.000

.3

Page 12: The Real Numbers

Repeating decimals

.3

The bar tells us that it is a repeating decimal.

The bar extends over the entire pattern that repeats.

.09

Page 13: The Real Numbers

Rational numbers as decimals

Rational numbers can be converted from fractions to either

• Terminating decimals or

• Repeating decimals

Page 14: The Real Numbers

Rational numbers

The subsets of real numbers that we’ve discussed are “nested” like Russian dolls.

Page 15: The Real Numbers

Venn Diagrams

Rational numbers

Natural numbers

Whole numbers

Integers

Venn diagrams illustrate how sets relate to each other.

Subsets are drawn inside the larger set.

Page 16: The Real Numbers

Irrational Numbers

In English, the word “irrational” means not rational - illogical, crazy, wacky.

In math, irrational numbers are not rational.

They usually look wacky!

…and their decimals never end or repeat!

3 175

Page 17: The Real Numbers

Irrational Numbers

There is one trick you need to watch out for!

They look wacky but because the number in the house is a perfect square, they are really the integers 5 and 9 in

disguise!

Sort of like the wolf at Grandma’s house!

25Num bers like and 81

Page 18: The Real Numbers

Rounding or truncating

Some decimals are much longer than we need. There are two ways we can make them shorter.

Truncating – just lop the extra digits off.

Rounding – use the digit to the right of the one we want to end with to determine whether to round up or not. If that

digit is 5 or higher, round up.

Page 19: The Real Numbers

Truncating

Truncating – just lop the extra digits off.

If we want to use with just 4 decimal places.

We’d just chop off the rest!

3.1415/926…

3.1415

Truncate ~ tree trunk ~ chop!

3.1415926...

Page 20: The Real Numbers

Rounding

If we want to round to 4 decimal places.

We’d look at the digit in the 5th place

9 is “5 or bigger” so the digit in the 4th spot goes up

3.14159

3.1416

3.1415926...

Page 21: The Real Numbers

Real numbers

The set of real numbers consists of two infinite, non-overlapping sets.

Every real number is either rational or irrational, but it can’t be both!

Rational numbers

Irrational numbers

Page 22: The Real Numbers

Vocabulary

Natural numbersWhole numbers

IntegersRational numbersIrrational numbers

Real numbersTruncatingRounding