Safekipedia
Elementary mathematicsReal algebraic geometryReal numbers

Real number

Adapted from Wikipedia Β· Adventurer experience

In mathematics, a real number is a number that can be used to measure a continuous one-dimensional quantity such as a length, duration or temperature. Every real number can be shown almost uniquely by an infinite decimal expansion.

The set of real numbers includes the rational numbers, such as the integer βˆ’5 and the fraction 4β€Š/β€Š3, as well as numbers that are not rational, known as irrational numbers. Examples of irrational numbers include √2 and Ο€. Real numbers can be pictured as points on a line called the number line or real line.

The idea of real numbers began in the 19th-century mathematics. Today, real numbers are important for real analysis, the study of real functions and real-valued sequences. They help us understand many parts of the world, from physics to engineering.

Characterizing properties

Real numbers are special because they follow certain rules that make them easy to use in math. These rules help mathematicians and scientists do calculations, even though they didn’t fully understand real numbers until the 1800s.

Because of these rules, all real numbers behave the same way. This helps us solve problems and understand measurements like length or temperature.

Arithmetic

The real numbers are a system where we can do basic math, like addition and multiplication. These operations follow rules that help us calculate correctly.

For example, adding two real numbers always gives another real number. The order of addition does not matter (like how 3 + 4 is the same as 4 + 3). Similar rules work for multiplication. Real numbers also include special values like zero (which does not change a number when added) and one (which does not change a number when multiplied).

Topological completeness

Main article: Completeness of the real numbers

Real numbers are special because many lists of numbers can get very close to a certain value. This means the numbers in a sequence come nearer and nearer to one number.

For example, a sequence that adds more digits of the square root of 2 β€” like 1, 1.4, 1.41, 1.414, and so on β€” gets closer to the square root of 2, even if it never hits it exactly. This shows that real numbers are "complete," with no missing parts. This idea is useful in math, especially in calculus and analysis.

Cardinality

The set of all real numbers is uncountable. This means that even though both the set of all natural numbers like 1, 2, 3, and the set of all real numbers are very large, there is no way to pair every real number with a unique natural number.

The size, or cardinality, of all real numbers is called the cardinality of the continuum. It is bigger than the size of the natural numbers, which is called aleph-zero.

Mathematicians have a question called the continuum hypothesis about whether there is a size between these two. The most common system of rules for mathematics, called Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice (ZFC), cannot prove or disprove this hypothesis. Some versions of these rules support the hypothesis, while others do not.

Other properties

See also: Real line

Real numbers have many useful properties. You can imagine them as points on a straight line. The distance between any two points can always be measured. This helps us describe real-world distances and sizes.

Every positive real number has a square root. This helps us solve math problems and find patterns in numbers. Real numbers also follow special rules that make them easier to use in math.

History

Simple fractions were used by the Egyptians around 1000 BC. Around the same time, early Indian mathematicians found that some numbers, like the square roots of 2, could not be written as fractions.

Later, Greek mathematicians also learned that the square root of 2 was one of these special numbers that could not be written as a simple fraction. Over time, different cultures found ways to work with these numbers. This led to the modern idea of real numbers we use today.

Formal definitions

Main article: Construction of the real numbers

Real numbers are a special kind of number used in math. They help us describe things that can be measured exactly, like the length of a line or the temperature outside. These numbers can be very precise, and we can write them using endless decimals, like 3.14159... for pi.

All real numbers follow certain rules, and these rules make sure that real numbers behave in a consistent way. No matter how you build these numbers, the rules stay the same, which means we can think of all real numbers as being part of one big, orderly system.

Applications and connections

Real numbers are important in science. They help describe things like how far an object is, how heavy it is, or how fast it moves. Big ideas in physics, like how gravity works or how tiny particles behave, use real numbers.

Computers can’t handle all real numbers perfectly because they would need endless digits. Instead, they use approximations, which can sometimes cause small errors in calculations. Special tools can handle some real numbers exactly, but this can be slow and use a lot of memory.

Vocabulary and notation

The set of all real numbers is written as R or ℝ. These numbers help us describe things like length or temperature.

We also have special groups of real numbers, like positive real numbers (ℝ⁺) and negative real numbers (ℝ⁻). When we write ℝⁿ, we mean groups of n real numbers together, like points in space.

Generalizations and extensions

The real numbers can be expanded in many ways. One way is through complex numbers, which solve all polynomial equations but cannot be ordered like real numbers.

Other expansions include the affinely extended real number system, which adds two special values, +∞ and βˆ’βˆž, and the real projective line, which adds a single value ∞ and allows division by zero. These systems are not fields like the real numbers but have interesting properties.

There are also larger systems like the long real line, which is like the real numbers but extended to include many more points. Other extensions, such as hyperreal numbers and surreal numbers, include very small and very large numbers that are not possible in the real numbers.

[Self-adjoint operators] on a Hilbert space also generalize real numbers in many ways, maintaining order and completeness while corresponding to real values in certain situations.

: /w/0 : /w/2 : /w/5 : /w/8 : /w/9 : /w/10 : /w/13 : /w/14

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Real number, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.