Properties Of Rational Number

Unit: Number System

Chapter: Properties of Rational Numbers

Reference: – Introduction to Properties of Rational Numbers, Closure Property, Commutative Property, Associative Property, Distributive Property, Identity Property (Additive & Multiplicative), Inverse Property (Additive & Multiplicative), Property of Zero, Density Property, Comparison Properties, Properties on Number Line, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes, Practice Grid

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

  • Introduction to Properties of Rational Numbers
  • Closure, Commutative, Associative, Distributive Properties
  • Additive and Multiplicative Identity and Inverse
  • Density Property and Special Properties of Zero
  • Distinguishing Between Properties

Introduction to Properties of Rational Numbers

Definition

Properties of rational numbers are the fundamental rules that govern how rational numbers behave under mathematical operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division). These properties help us simplify expressions, solve equations, and understand the structure of the rational number system.

When we study properties of rational numbers, we essentially ask:

"What rules always hold true when we add, subtract, multiply, or divide rational numbers?"

Once we understand these properties, we can predict outcomes, simplify calculations, and identify which property is being applied in a given situation.

Importance of Understanding Properties

  • Forms the foundation of algebra and equation solving
  • Helps in mental math and quick calculations
  • Enables simplification of complex expressions
  • Essential for proving mathematical statements
  • Used in computer science (data structures, algorithms)
  • Builds logical thinking and reasoning skills
  • Critical for advanced mathematics (group theory, field theory)

Example

Group: {(2+3)+4, 2+(3+4)}
Common Property: Both equal 9 — demonstrates Associative Property of addition.

So, if given (2+3)+4 and 2+(3×4), the second would not belong because it mixes operations.

Subtopics

1. Concept of Properties

Properties are like "rules of the game" for numbers. They tell us what we can and cannot do when performing operations.

Key Points:

  • Properties apply to all rational numbers (unless stated otherwise, e.g., division by zero).
  • Different operations have different properties.
  • Some properties hold for addition but not for subtraction, etc.
  • Understanding properties helps avoid common mistakes.

2. Classification of Properties

Property Category

Applies To

What It Means

Closure

+, -, ×, ÷

Result stays within rational numbers

Commutative

+, ×

Order doesn't change the result

Associative

+, ×

Grouping doesn't change the result

Distributive

× over +

Multiplication distributes over addition

Identity

+, ×

Number that doesn't change others

Inverse

+, ×

Number that "undoes" the operation

Density

Ordering

Between any two, there's another

Closure Property

Definition

A set is said to be closed under an operation if performing that operation on any two elements of the set always produces another element that is also in the set.

For rational numbers ℚ: When we add, subtract, or multiply any two rational numbers, the result is always a rational number. Division also yields a rational number, except when dividing by zero.

Closure Table for Rational Numbers

Operation

Closed?

Explanation

Example

Addition (+)

✅ Yes

Sum of two rationals is rational

1/2 + 1/3 = 5/6 ∈ ℚ

Subtraction (-)

✅ Yes

Difference of two rationals is rational

3/4 – 1/2 = 1/4 ∈ ℚ

Multiplication (×)

✅ Yes

Product of two rationals is rational

2/3 × 4/5 = 8/15 ∈ ℚ

Division (÷)

⚠️ Partially

Quotient is rational except when dividing by 0

5/6 ÷ 2/3 = 5/4 ∈ ℚ; but ÷0 undefined

Special Note on Division:

  • a ÷ b is rational for all rational a and b (b ≠ 0)
  • Division by zero is not defined (and zero is rational)
  • So rational numbers are almost closed under division

Quick Rule:
Rational numbers are closed under +, -, ×, and ÷ (except by 0).

Commutative Property

Definition

The commutative property states that the order of numbers does not affect the result of an operation.

Operation

Commutative?

Formula

Example

Verification

Addition (+)

✅ Yes

a + b = b + a

2/3 + 1/2 = 1/2 + 2/3

4/6+3/6 = 3/6+4/6 = 7/6

Subtraction (-)

❌ No

a – b ≠ b – a (unless a=b)

3/4 – 1/4 = 1/2; 1/4 – 3/4 = -1/2

1/2 ≠ -1/2

Multiplication (×)

✅ Yes

a × b = b × a

2/3 × 4/5 = 4/5 × 2/3

8/15 = 8/15

Division (÷)

❌ No

a ÷ b ≠ b ÷ a (unless a=b)

1/2 ÷ 1/4 = 2; 1/4 ÷ 1/2 = 1/2

2 ≠ 1/2

Memory Aid:
Commutative → Change order → works for Computation of addition and multiplication only.

Example – Identifying Commutative Property:

Which of the following demonstrates the commutative property?

  1. 2/3 + 1/3 = 1
  2. 2/3 + 1/2 = 1/2 + 2/3 ✓
  3. 2/3 × 1/2 = 1/3

Answer: Statement 2 shows commutative property.

Associative Property

Definition

The associative property states that the grouping of numbers (which pair we combine first) does not affect the result of an operation.

Operation

Associative

Formula

Example

Verification

Addition (+)

✅ Yes

(a+b)+c = a+(b+c)

(1/2+1/3)+1/6 = 1/2+(1/3+1/6)

LHS=5/6+1/6=1; RHS=1/2+1/2=1

Subtraction (-)

❌ No

(a-b)-c ≠ a-(b-c)

(1-1/2)-1/4 = 1/4; 1-(1/2-1/4)=3/4

1/4 ≠ 3/4

Multiplication (×)

✅ Yes

(a×b)×c = a×(b×c)

(2/3×3/4)×2 = 2/3×(3/4×2)

LHS=1/2×2=1; RHS=2/3×3/2=1

Division (÷)

❌ No

(a÷b)÷c ≠ a÷(b÷c)

(8÷4)÷2 = 1; 8÷(4÷2)=4

1 ≠ 4

Memory Aid:
Associative → Arrange parentheses differently → works for Addition and multiplication.

Important Distinction:

  • Commutative: changes order
  • Associative: changes grouping (parentheses)

Distributive Property

Definition

The distributive property connects multiplication and addition (or subtraction). It states that multiplying a number by a sum (or difference) is the same as multiplying the number by each term and then adding (or subtracting).

Formulas:

Type

Formula

Example

Distribution over addition

a × (b + c) = a×b + a×c

2/3 × (1/2 + 1/6) = 2/3×1/2 + 2/3×1/6

Distribution over subtraction

a × (b – c) = a×b – a×c

3 × (2/3 – 1/4) = 3×2/3 – 3×1/4

Verification of Example:

Left side: 2/3 × (1/2 + 1/6) = 2/3 × (3/6+1/6) = 2/3 × 4/6 = 2/3 × 2/3 = 4/9

Right side: (2/3×1/2) + (2/3×1/6) = (2/6) + (2/18) = 1/3 + 1/9 = 3/9+1/9=4/9

Special Forms of Distributive Property:

Form

Expression

Equivalent

Left distribution

a × (b + c)

a×b + a×c

Right distribution

(a + b) × c

a×c + b×c

Factoring (reverse)

a×b + a×c

a × (b + c)

Quick Tip:
The distributive property is the reason we can "multiply out" parentheses in algebra.

Identity Property

Definition

An identity element is a number that, when combined with any other number under a given operation, leaves that number unchanged.

Additive Identity

Property

Value

Formula

Example

Additive Identity

0

a + 0 = a = 0 + a

5/7 + 0 = 5/7

Key Points:

  • Zero is the additive identity for rational numbers.
  • Adding zero to any rational number does not change it.
  • Zero is unique (only one additive identity).

Multiplicative Identity

Property

Value

Formula

Example

Multiplicative Identity

1

a × 1 = a = 1 × a

3/4 × 1 = 3/4

 

 

 

 

Key Points:

  • One is the multiplicative identity for rational numbers.
  • Multiplying any rational number by 1 does not change it.
  • One is unique (only one multiplicative identity).

Comparison Table:

Identity Type

Element

Operation

Effect

Additive

0

+

a + 0 = a

Multiplicative

1

×

a × 1 = a

Inverse Property

Definition

An inverse is a number that "undoes" an operation, combining with the original number to yield the identity element.

Additive Inverse

Property

Formula

Example

Additive Inverse

a + (-a) = 0 = (-a) + a

2/3 + (-2/3) = 0

Key Points:

  • The additive inverse of a is -a.
  • Also called the opposite of a.
  • Every rational number has a unique additive inverse.
  • Zero is its own additive inverse.

Multiplicative Inverse (Reciprocal)

Property

Formula

Example

Multiplicative Inverse

a × (1/a) = 1 = (1/a) × a (a ≠ 0)

4/5 × 5/4 = 1

Key Points:

  • The multiplicative inverse of a (a≠0) is 1/a.
  • Also called the reciprocal.
  • Every non-zero rational number has a unique reciprocal.
  • 1 and -1 are their own reciprocals.
  • Zero has no multiplicative inverse (1/0 undefined).

Comparison Table:

Inverse Type

Operation

Identity

Inverse of a

Example

Additive

+

0

-a

Inverse of 5/3 is -5/3

Multiplicative

×

1

1/a (a≠0)

Inverse of 5/3 is 3/5

Property of Zero (Special Properties)

Zero has several unique properties that make it special among rational numbers.

Property

Statement

Example

Additive Identity

a + 0 = a

7/8 + 0 = 7/8

Multiplication by Zero

a × 0 = 0

9/5 × 0 = 0

Zero Divided by a

0 ÷ a = 0 (a ≠ 0)

0 ÷ 5/3 = 0

Division by Zero

a ÷ 0 is undefined

3/4 ÷ 0 = undefined

Zero's Additive Inverse

-0 = 0

Zero is its own opposite

Zero's Multiplicative Inverse

Does NOT exist

No number × 0 = 1

Density Property

Definition

The density property states that between any two distinct rational numbers; there exists infinitely many other rational numbers.

This is one of the most important properties that distinguishes rational numbers from integers.

Example:

Between 1/3 and 1/2:

  • Average = (1/3+1/2)/2 = (5/6)/2 = 5/12
  • Between 1/3 and 5/12: average = (1/3+5/12)/2 = (9/12)/2 = 9/24 = 3/8
  • And so on… infinitely many!

Key Points:

  • No matter how close two rational numbers are, there is always another rational number between them.
  • This means rational numbers have "no gaps" in the sense of infinite density.
  • However, irrational numbers also exist between rationals (so rationals are dense but not continuous).

Comparison Properties

Rational numbers can be compared using the following properties:

Property

Statement

Example

Trichotomy Law

Exactly one of: a < b, a = b, or a > b is true

2/3 < 3/4; cannot be both/neither

Transitivity

If a < b and b < c, then a < c

If 1/4 < 1/2 and 1/2 < 2/3, then 1/4 < 2/3

Addition Property

If a < b, then a + c < b + c

1/3 < 1/2 → 1/3+1/4 < 1/2+1/4

Multiplication Property

If a < b and c > 0, then a×c < b×c; if c < 0, inequality reverses

1/3 < 1/2 → multiply by 2: 2/3 < 1; multiply by -2: -2/3 > -1

Properties on Number Line

Property

Visual Meaning

Order

Numbers increase from left to right

Additive Inverse

Symmetric about zero (mirror images)

Density

Between any two points, there are infinitely many rational points

Identity (0)

Starting point for addition

Identity (1)

Unit distance from zero

Complete Property Summary Table

Property

Addition (+)

Subtraction (-)

Multiplication (×)

Division (÷)

Closure

✅ Yes

✅ Yes

✅ Yes

⚠️ Except ÷0

Commutative

✅ Yes

❌ No

✅ Yes

❌ No

Associative

✅ Yes

❌ No

✅ Yes

❌ No

Identity

0

1

Inverse

-a

1/a (a≠0)

Distributive

× over + and –

Solved Examples

Example 1: Name the property illustrated: (2/3 × 4/5) × 5/6 = 2/3 × (4/5 × 5/6)

Solution: The grouping of factors changed, but the product remains the same.
Answer: Associative Property of Multiplication

Example 2: Name the property illustrated: 7/9 × (4/5 – 2/3) = 7/9 × 4/5 – 7/9 × 2/3

Solution: Multiplication distributes over subtraction.
Answer: Distributive Property of Multiplication over Subtraction

Example 3: Verify closure property for addition with a = 2/7 and b = 3/5.

Solution: a + b = 2/7 + 3/5 = (10/35 + 21/35) = 31/35, which is a rational number.
Answer: Closure holds.

Example 4: Find the additive inverse and multiplicative inverse of -8/11.

Solution:

  • Additive inverse = 8/11
  • Multiplicative inverse = -11/8

Answer: Additive: 8/11, Multiplicative: -11/8

Example 5: Identify which property fails for subtraction: a – b = b – a.

Solution: For a=2/3, b=1/3: LHS=1/3, RHS=-1/3 → not equal.
Answer: Commutative Property fails for subtraction.

Example 6 – Odd One Out Style Problem:

Examine the five statements below. Each demonstrates a property of rational numbers. Exactly one statement is FALSE. Identify it and give three independent reasons.

Item

Statement

1

2/3 + (1/2 + 1/6) = (2/3 + 1/2) + 1/6

2

5/7 × 1 = 5/7

3

3/4 × (1/2 × 2/3) = (3/4 × 1/2) × 2/3

4

4/9 ÷ 0 = 0

5

1/2 × (3/4 + 1/4) = 1/2 × 3/4 + 1/2 × 1/4

 

 

Solution:

(A) Property verification:

  1. Associative Property of Addition ✓ True
  2. Multiplicative Identity Property ✓ True
  3. Associative Property of Multiplication ✓ True
  4. Division by zero ✗ False (undefined, not 0)
  5. Distributive Property ✓ True

(B) Mathematical computation check:

  1. LHS: 2/3 + (3/6+1/6)=2/3+4/6=2/3+2/3=4/3; RHS: (4/6+3/6)+1/6=7/6+1/6=8/6=4/3 ✓
  2. 5/7 × 1 = 5/7 ✓
  3. LHS: 3/4 × (1/3)=1/4; RHS: (3/8)×2/3=6/24=1/4 ✓
  4. 4/9 ÷ 0 → division by zero is undefined, not 0 ✗
  5. LHS: 1/2 × 1 = 1/2; RHS: 3/8 + 1/8 = 4/8 = 1/2 ✓

 

(C) Property-based reasoning:

  • Item 4 violates the fundamental rule that division by zero is undefined in mathematics.
  • Zero has no multiplicative inverse, so division by zero has no meaning.
  • All other statements correctly demonstrate valid properties (associative, identity, distributive).

Conclusion: Item 4 is the odd one out (the false statement).

 

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