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In mathematics, a rational number is a number which can be expressed as a quotient of two integers. Non-integer rational numbers (commonly called fractions) are usually written as the vulgar fraction Each rational number can be written in infinitely many forms, such as The decimal expansion of a rational number is eventually periodic (in the case of a finite expansion the zeroes which implicitly follow it form the periodic part). The same is true for any other integral base above one, and is also true when rational numbers are considered to be p-adic numbers rather than real numbers. Conversely, if the expansion of a number for one base is periodic, it is periodic for all bases and the number is rational. A real number that is not a rational number is called an irrational number. The set of all rational numbers, which constitutes a field, is denoted where
The term rationalThe term rational in reference to the set ArithmeticTwo rational numbers Two fractions are added as follows The rule for multiplication is Additive and multiplicative inverses exist in the rational numbers It follows that the quotient of two fractions is given by Egyptian fractionsAny positive rational number can be expressed as a sum of distinct reciprocals of positive integers, such as For any positive rational number, there are infinitely many different such representations, called Egyptian fractions, as they were used by the ancient Egyptians. The Egyptians also had a different notation for dyadic fractions. Formal constructionMathematically we may construct the rational numbers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers and if c ≠ 0, division by The intuition is that This equivalence relation is a congruence relation: it is compatible with the addition and multiplication defined above, and we may define Q to be the quotient set of ~, i.e. we identify two pairs (a, b) and (c, d) if they are equivalent in the above sense. (This construction can be carried out in any integral domain: see field of fractions.) We can also define a total order on Q by writing The integers may be considered to be rational numbers by the embedding that maps PropertiesThe set The rationals are the smallest field with characteristic zero: every other field of characteristic zero contains a copy of The algebraic closure of The set of all rational numbers is countable. Since the set of all real numbers is uncountable, we say that almost all real numbers are irrational, in the sense of Lebesgue measure, i.e. the set of rational numbers is a null set. The rationals are a densely ordered set: between any two rationals, there sits another one, in fact infinitely many other ones. Any totally ordered set which is countable, dense (in the above sense), and has no least or greatest element is order isomorphic to the rational numbers. Real numbers and topological properties of the rationalsThe rationals are a dense subset of the real numbers: every real number has rational numbers arbitrarily close to it. A related property is that rational numbers are the only numbers with finite expansions as regular continued fractions. By virtue of their order, the rationals carry an order topology. The rational numbers also carry a subspace topology. The rational numbers form a metric space by using the metric d(x, y) = | x − y |, and this yields a third topology on p-adic numbersIn addition to the absolute value metric mentioned above, there are other metrics which turn Let p be a prime number and for any non-zero integer a let | a | p = p − n, where pn is the highest power of p dividing a; In addition write | 0 | p = 0. For any rational number Then The metric space External links
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