Inverse And Reciprocal Of Rationals

Unit: Number System

Chapter: Inverse & Reciprocal of Rational

Reference: – Introduction to Inverse & Reciprocal, Multiplicative Inverse Definition, Additive Inverse Definition, Difference Between Inverse and Reciprocal, Reciprocal of Rational Numbers, Finding Reciprocal of Fractions, Negative Reciprocals, Reciprocal of Zero (Undefined), Reciprocal of Integers, Reciprocal of Negative Rationals, Reciprocal of Decimal Numbers, Properties of Reciprocals, Applications of Reciprocals, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes, Practice Grid

After studying this chapter, you should be able to understand:

  • Introduction to Additive & Multiplicative Inverses
  • Reciprocal as Multiplicative Inverse of Rational Numbers
  • Finding Reciprocal of Fractions, Integers, Decimals, and Negative Numbers
  • Properties and Applications of Reciprocals

Introduction to Inverse & Reciprocal

Definition

In the context of rational numbers, "inverse" can refer to two different concepts:

Type

Name

Operation

Definition

Example

Additive Inverse

Opposite

Addition

The number that when added to the original gives 0

Additive inverse of 5 is -5 (5 + (-5) = 0)

Multiplicative Inverse

Reciprocal

Multiplication

The number that when multiplied by the original gives 1

Multiplicative inverse of 5 is 1/5 (5 × 1/5 = 1)

When we study reciprocal of rational, we specifically study the multiplicative inverse.

When we classify inverses/reciprocals, we essentially ask:

"What number combines with the given number to yield the identity element (0 for addition, 1 for multiplication)?"

Once we identify the inverse, we can solve equations, simplify expressions, and understand number relationships.

Importance

  • Essential for solving linear equations (dividing by a number = multiplying by reciprocal)
  • Used in ratio and proportion problems
  • Critical for understanding division of fractions
  • Appears in physics (resistance, parallel circuits, optics)
  • Used in financial mathematics (interest rates, exchange rates)
  • Foundation for calculus (derivatives of reciprocal functions)

Example

Group: {2, 3, 4, 5}
Reciprocals: {1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5}
Common Property: Each is the multiplicative inverse of the original.

So, if "0" was given as a number, its reciprocal is undefined (does not belong).

Subtopics

1. Concept of Additive Inverse

The additive inverse of a rational number a is -a.

Original

Additive Inverse

Sum

7

-7

7 + (-7) = 0

-3/4

3/4

-3/4 + 3/4 = 0

0

0

0 + 0 = 0

Key Points:

  • Every rational number has a unique additive inverse.
  • Additive inverse is also called the opposite.
  • On the number line, additive inverses are symmetric about 0.

2. Concept of Multiplicative Inverse (Reciprocal)

The multiplicative inverse (reciprocal) of a non-zero rational number a is 1/a.

The reciprocal of a fraction p/q (p ≠ 0, q ≠ 0) is q/p.

Original

Reciprocal

Product

5

1/5

5 × 1/5 = 1

2/3

3/2

2/3 × 3/2 = 1

-4/7

-7/4

(-4/7) × (-7/4) = 1

0.25 = 1/4

4

0.25 × 4 = 1

Special Note:

  • Zero has no reciprocal (1/0 is undefined).
  • The reciprocal of 1 is 1.
  • The reciprocal of -1 is -1.

 

Reciprocal of Rational Numbers

Definition

The reciprocal of a rational number is obtained by interchanging the numerator and denominator (for fractional form) or dividing 1 by the number (for decimal form).

Formal Definition:
For any non-zero rational number a, the reciprocal is the number b such that a × b = 1.

Importance of Reciprocal

  • Converts division into multiplication: a ÷ b = a × (1/b)
  • Used to simplify complex fractions
  • Helps in solving proportions
  • Essential for rate, speed, and work problems

Subtopics

1. Reciprocal of a Proper Fraction

For a proper fraction (numerator < denominator), the reciprocal is an improper fraction (greater than 1).

Examples:

Proper Fraction

Reciprocal

Value of Reciprocal

1/2

2/1 = 2

> 1

2/3

3/2 = 1.5

> 1

3/5

5/3 ≈ 1.667

> 1

7/8

8/7 ≈ 1.143

> 1

Quick Tip:
Reciprocal of a proper fraction is always greater than 1.

2. Reciprocal of an Improper Fraction

For an improper fraction (numerator > denominator), the reciprocal is a proper fraction (less than 1).

Examples:

Improper Fraction

Reciprocal

Value of Reciprocal

5/3

3/5 = 0.6

< 1

7/4

4/7 ≈ 0.571

< 1

11/5

5/11 ≈ 0.455

< 1

9/2

2/9 ≈ 0.222

< 1

Quick Tip:
Reciprocal of an improper fraction is always less than 1.

3. Reciprocal of an Integer

An integer n (n ≠ 0) can be written as n/1, so its reciprocal is 1/n.

Examples:

Integer

Reciprocal

Value

10

1/10 = 0.1

 

-8

-1/8 = -0.125

 

1

1/1 = 1

(self-reciprocal)

-1

-1/1 = -1

(self-reciprocal)

0

Undefined

(no reciprocal)

Special Note:

  • 1 and -1 are the only rational numbers that are their own reciprocals.
  • Because 1 × 1 = 1 and (-1) × (-1) = 1.

4. Reciprocal of a Negative Rational Number

The reciprocal of a negative rational number is also negative.

Examples:

Original

Reciprocal

Product

-2/3

-3/2

(-2/3) × (-3/2) = 1

-5

-1/5

(-5) × (-1/5) = 1

-7/4

-4/7

(-7/4) × (-4/7) = 1

Key Point:
The sign of the reciprocal is the same as the sign of the original (because product must be positive 1).

5. Reciprocal of a Decimal Number

Convert the decimal to a fraction, then flip.

Examples:

Decimal

As Fraction

Reciprocal

0.5

1/2

2

0.25

1/4

4

0.125

1/8

8

0.75

3/4

4/3 ≈ 1.333

2.5

5/2

2/5 = 0.4

Quick Tip:
Reciprocal of a decimal between 0 and 1 is > 1.
Reciprocal of a decimal > 1 is between 0 and 1.

 

Properties of Reciprocals

Property

Statement

Example

Non-zero requirement

0 has no reciprocal

1/0 is undefined

Self-reciprocal

1 and -1 are their own reciprocals

1 × 1 = 1, (-1) × (-1) = 1

Product property

a × (1/a) = 1

5 × 1/5 = 1

Reciprocal of reciprocal

1/(1/a) = a (a ≠ 0)

1/(1/7) = 7

Reciprocal of product

1/(a × b) = (1/a) × (1/b)

1/(2×3) = 1/6 = (1/2)×(1/3)

Reciprocal of quotient

1/(a/b) = b/a

1/(5/7) = 7/5

Reciprocal of negative

1/(-a) = -(1/a)

1/(-4) = -1/4

Sign preservation

Sign remains same

-3 → -1/3

Difference Between Additive Inverse and Multiplicative Inverse (Reciprocal)

Feature

Additive Inverse (Opposite)

Multiplicative Inverse (Reciprocal)

Operation

Addition

Multiplication

Identity element

0

1

Formula

-a

1/a (a ≠ 0)

For a = 5

-5

1/5

For a = -3

3

-1/3

For a = 0

0 (exists)

Undefined (does not exist)

For a = 1

-1

1 (same)

For a = -1

1

-1 (same)

Product of a and its inverse

a + (-a) = 0

a × (1/a) = 1

Example to distinguish:

Given number: 2/3

  • Additive inverse = -2/3 → 2/3 + (-2/3) = 0
  • Multiplicative inverse (reciprocal) = 3/2 → 2/3 × 3/2 = 1

Applications of Reciprocals

1. Division of Fractions

a/b ÷ c/d = a/b × d/c = (a × d)/(b × c)

Example: 3/4 ÷ 2/5 = 3/4 × 5/2 = 15/8

2. Solving Equations

If 5x = 15, multiply both sides by reciprocal of 5 (which is 1/5):
x = 15 × 1/5 = 3

3. Rate and Work Problems

If a pipe fills a tank in 3 hours, its filling rate is 1/3 tank per hour.

4. Electrical Resistance (Parallel Circuits)

1/R Total = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + 1/R₃

5. Speed and Time

If speed = distance/time, then time = distance × (1/speed)

6. Fractions and Ratios

To find the ratio inverted property: a/b = c/d ⇒ b/a = d/c

Solved Examples

Example 1: Find the reciprocal of 3/7.

Solution: Reciprocal = 7/3

Answer: 7/3

Example 2: Find the reciprocal of -5.

Solution: -5 = -5/1 → Reciprocal = -1/5

Answer: -1/5

Example 3: Find the product of a number and its reciprocal for a = 4/9.

Solution: Reciprocal = 9/4 → Product = 4/9 × 9/4 = 1

Answer: 1

Example 4: Find the additive inverse and multiplicative inverse of -7/2.

Solution:

  • Additive inverse = 7/2
  • Multiplicative inverse (reciprocal) = -2/7

Answer: Additive: 7/2, Multiplicative: -2/7

Example 5: If the reciprocal of (x/3) is 12/5, find x.

Solution:

Reciprocal of x/3 = 3/x
Given: 3/x = 12/5
Cross multiply: 3 × 5 = 12 × x → 15 = 12x → x = 15/12 = 5/4

Answer: x = 5/4

Example 6: Find the reciprocal of 0.2.

Solution: 0.2 = 2/10 = 1/5 → Reciprocal = 5

Answer: 5

Example 7: Which is greater: the reciprocal of 2/3 or the reciprocal of 3/4?

Solution:

Reciprocal of 2/3 = 3/2 = 1.5
Reciprocal of 3/4 = 4/3 ≈ 1.333
1.5 > 1.333, so 3/2 > 4/3

Answer: Reciprocal of 2/3 is greater.

Example 8 – Odd One Out Style Problem:

Examine the five items below. Each row shows a number and its claimed reciprocal. Exactly one row has an INCORRECT reciprocal. Identify it and give three independent reasons (A) definition check, (B) product verification, (C) property-based reasoning).

Item

Original Number

Claimed Reciprocal

1

3/4

4/3

2

-7

-1/7

3

0

0

4

2.5

0.4

5

-1

-1

Solution:

(A) Definition check (interchanging numerator/denominator or 1/a):

  1. 3/4 → 4/3 ✓ Correct
  2. -7 → -1/7 ✓ Correct
  3. 0 → 0 ? 1/0 is undefined, so 0 is NOT the reciprocal of 0 ✗ Incorrect
  4. 2.5 = 5/2 → 2/5 = 0.4 ✓ Correct
  5. -1 → -1 ✓ Correct (since -1 × -1 = 1)

(B) Product verification (original × reciprocal should = 1):

  1. 3/4 × 4/3 = 1 ✓
  2. -7 × (-1/7) = 1 ✓
  3. 0 × 0 = 0 ✗ (should be 1, but 0 ≠ 1)
  4. 2.5 × 0.4 = 1 ✓
  5. -1 × -1 = 1 ✓

(C) Property-based reasoning:

  • The reciprocal of a non-zero number is defined as 1/a.
  • 0 has no reciprocal because 1/0 is undefined in rational numbers.
  • Saying "reciprocal of 0 is 0" violates the fundamental property that a × (reciprocal) = 1.
  • Among all items, only item 3 involves zero, which is the only rational number without a reciprocal.

Conclusion: Item 3 is the odd one out because it incorrectly claims that 0 is the reciprocal of 0 (when in fact 0 has no reciprocal).

Example 9 – Odd One Out (More Complex):

Examine the six rational numbers below. Exactly one does NOT have a reciprocal that belongs to a specific property group. Identify the odd one out and justify.

Items: { 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 4/5, 5/6, 1 }

Property to check: "Reciprocal is greater than the original number"

Solution:

Item

Reciprocal

Original vs Reciprocal

1/2

2

0.5 < 2 → Reciprocal > Original ✓

2/3

3/2 = 1.5

0.667 < 1.5 → Reciprocal > Original ✓

3/4

4/3 ≈ 1.333

0.75 < 1.333 → Reciprocal > Original ✓

4/5

5/4 = 1.25

0.8 < 1.25 → Reciprocal > Original ✓

5/6

6/5 = 1.2

0.833 < 1.2 → Reciprocal > Original ✓

1

1

1 = 1 → Reciprocal = Original ✗

Three independent reasons why 1 is the odd one out:

(A) Numerical comparison: For all proper fractions (1/2 to 5/6), reciprocal > original. For 1, reciprocal = original.

(B) Fraction property: Proper fractions (numerator < denominator) always have reciprocals > 1, while the original is < 1. For 1, both original and reciprocal equal 1.

(C) Self-reciprocal uniqueness: 1 is one of only two numbers (1 and -1) that are their own reciprocals. All other items (proper fractions) are not self-reciprocal.

Conclusion: 1 is the odd one out.

 

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