Classification of Numbers (Natural, Whole, Integers, Rational, Irrational, Real) - Nerdstudy

Classification of Numbers (Natural, Whole, Integers, Rational, Irrational, Real) - Nerdstudy

Classification of Numbers

Introduction to Number Classifications

  • This lesson covers various classifications of numbers: natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, rational numbers, irrational numbers, and real numbers.

Natural Numbers

  • Natural numbers are represented by the symbol for counting (1, 2, 3,...). They do not include zero or negative numbers.
  • A mnemonic for natural numbers is that we start counting from one rather than zero. Thus, they are the most basic classification of numbers.

Whole Numbers

  • Whole numbers include all natural numbers plus zero; they can be denoted with a specific symbol.
  • The distinction is that while whole numbers start at zero, natural numbers do not include it. Hence every natural number is a whole number but not vice versa.
  • Some educational contexts may classify natural numbers as including zero; this varies in fields like set theory and computer science where counting starts from zero.

Integers

  • Integers encompass all whole numbers along with their negative counterparts (e.g., -1, -2,...). They exclude decimals and fractions.

Rational Numbers

  • Rational numbers consist of all previous classifications plus decimals and fractions that can be expressed as P/Q where Q ≠ 0 (e.g., 17/3 = 5.666...).
  • Even non-repeating decimals like 19/17 are considered rational because both numerator and denominator are integers not equal to zero.

Relationships Among Number Sets

  • If a number is identified as a natural number, it can also be classified as a whole number, integer, and rational number due to the hierarchical nature of these sets. This analogy compares geographical locations (Tokyo in Japan) to illustrate inclusion within larger sets.

Irrational Numbers

  • Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as fractions; examples include pi and √2 which have non-repeating decimal expansions making them distinct from rational ones.

Real Numbers

Video description

🙌Nerdstudy.com - check out our website for the most clear and detailed math lessons! Also check out all of our Shakespeare lessons! Youtube loves them, and we're sure you will too! Hamlet study guide: https://youtu.be/rPC57q8nsQg Romeo and Juliet study guide: https://youtu.be/XgdJeTH0lG4 Macbeth study guide: https://youtu.be/mJoj6C33gLk Othello study guide: https://youtu.be/dkFmyy4gWEk In this video, we go over a topic that many people graze over but don't really conquer. What in the world is a Natural Number? What's a Whole Number? We say Integers all the time, but how do they really differ from Rational numbers? And what in the world is an Irrational Number? We find out in the end that these number classifications sometimes wrap around each other (as larger classifications of numbers altogether). Let's learn about all the different types of classifications of numbers for the Real Numbers!