0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views6 pages

MathB2 Day1 Lecture

The document provides notes from a mathematics course on sets, fractions, and exponentiations. Some key points: - A set is a group of objects that meet a membership criterion. Subsets are parts of larger sets. - Fractions represent division, with the numerator on top and denominator on bottom. Mixed numbers combine an integer and fraction. Fractions have properties like multiplying/dividing the numerator and denominator by the same number. - Exponentiation, or using an exponent, is an operation that indicates how many times to use the base as a factor. Exponents allow writing very large numbers concisely.

Uploaded by

Khanh Linh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views6 pages

MathB2 Day1 Lecture

The document provides notes from a mathematics course on sets, fractions, and exponentiations. Some key points: - A set is a group of objects that meet a membership criterion. Subsets are parts of larger sets. - Fractions represent division, with the numerator on top and denominator on bottom. Mixed numbers combine an integer and fraction. Fractions have properties like multiplying/dividing the numerator and denominator by the same number. - Exponentiation, or using an exponent, is an operation that indicates how many times to use the base as a factor. Exponents allow writing very large numbers concisely.

Uploaded by

Khanh Linh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

Mathematics Course – Day 1

NOTES
CHAPTER 0. SETS
1. A set is a group of objects with a well-defined criterion for membership. In this case, we
are talking about sets of numbers - a group of numbers with similar characteristic.

2. Sub-sets is part of a set.


3. Sub-sets of R ?
Symbols Meaning Example
(a,b) x  (a, b)  a  x  b x  ( 3, 2)  3  x  2
[a,b] x   a, b   a  x  b x   10, 2  10  x  2
(a,b] x   a, b   a  x  b x   2, 4   2  x  4
( ;  ) 
(; a ) or (; a ] x  a or x  a
(a;  ) or [a, ) x  a or x  a

4. Union, intersection and substraction ?

1
5. Union, intersection and substraction on subsets ?

Example : A   7;3 & B  1;8

Operations Symbols Result Explanation

Union A  B   7;3  1;8 ( 7;8]

Intersection A  B  (7,3)  1;8 [1;3)

A \ B  (7,3) \ 1;8 (7;1)


Substraction
B \ A  1;8 \ (7,3) ….. ………………….

6. Find the union, intersection, and substrations between C & D, knowing that :
A  (, 2]
B  (1, 4)

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
7. Let’s check if we can list out all the elements of these following sets !

A   x  N | 2  x  14 C   x  Z | (2 x  3)(3 x  4)  0
B   x  R | x 2  4  5 D   x  Q | 2 x 2  5

..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................

2
CHAPTER 1 . FRACTIONS – RATIONAL EXPRESSIONS
1. Q – set of rational numbers
2. A fraction is actually a division with a dividend - the numerator - and a divisor -the denominator. The
form of a proper fraction is shown as below :

a
b  0
b

3. A fixed number is a combination of an integer and a fraction. In a mixed number, an integer is added to a
fraction:

b b
a a
c c

13 3 3 2.4  3 11 1 3.11  1 34
Example : 2 ; 2   ; 3  
5 5 4 4 4 11 11 11
4. How to put the minus symbol into a fraction ? Can we change that position ?

a a a a a
   
b b b b b

5. Fractions’s properties
Property 1 :When we multiply both the numerator and the denominator of a fraction by a same number, we
get a corresponding fraction equal to the original fraction.

a a.c

b b.c

Property 2 : When we divide both the numerator and denominator of a fraction by a same number, we get a
corresponding fraction equal to the original.

a a:c

b b:c

Property 3: Other special properties

1 a
 a 1 1
a a

a a a a a a
a    
1 b b b b b

6. Comparing fractions
- Comparing two fractions
+ with the same numerator ?
+ with the same denominator ?
+ with different numerator & denominator ?
a c
+ what happen if  ?
b d

3
- Comparing fractions with integers, percentages, or fixed numbers

- Comparing fractions with 0 - Comparing fractions with 1


a a
+ when would a fraction  0 ? + when would a fraction  1 ?
b b
a a
+ when would a fraction  0 ? + when would a fraction  1 ?
b b
a a
+ when would a fraction  0 ? + when would a fraction  1 ?
b b

7. Operations on fractions
+ Addition and substration :
2 4 2 4
Example : Perform addition  and subtraction 
11 15 11 15
We have : LCM (11,15)  165

x 1 x 1
Example. Perform addition 2
 and subtraction 2

3y 2x  3y 3y 2x  3 y

+ Multiplication & Division

a c ac a c a d ad
     
b d bd b d b c bc
Example :

2 1 2 1 x2 y 1
  .................   ............................   ......................................
3 11 3 11 1  3 y xy

a
Note : b  ad
c bc
d

4
CHAPTER 2 : EXPONENTIATIONS
1. Exponentiation or power is a operation on the base ( or factor ) and the exponent. It can be considered as
a form of a multiplication of n identical numbers a :

a
 a  a 
.........
  a  a a  a n
n

In which n is called the exponent and a is called the base.


2. The base and the exponent don’t have to be a number always.
Example :

+ Base and exponent are numbers : 311

+Base and exponents are numbers and variables : 3x ; x3


2
+Base and exponents are algebraic expressions : (2 x 3  1) 4 ;(2 x 2  3x) 4 x 1 ;sin 2 x

3. Pay attention to these specific expressions :

a. When the base is 0 or 1 : 0n  0;1n  1


b. When exponents are 0 , 1 , 2 or 3 : a 0  1; a1  a
1
c. When the exponents are negative numbers : an  n
a

4. Operations on exponentiations
Important note :
Power doesn’t have those properties of commutative, cohesive or distributive.
m n
an  am
m
a ( n )  (a n ) m
+ Operations on base ( a )
This kind of calculations applied in the cases where exponentiations have the same exponent.
n
n n n n n n an a
a  b  (a  b) a : b  (a : b)  
bn b
+ Calculations on exponents ( m, n)
This kind of calculations applied in the cases where exponentiations have the same base.

m n mn am
a a  a a : a  n  a mn
m n

a
m n mn  m   (a m ) n
n

a  a m n
a a
m 1
a n
 a m
 n
 n am
5
CHAPTER 3. ROOTS. SQUARE ROOTS. RADICALS.
1. As we have mentioned above, root is an inverse operation of exponentiation. It allows the calculation to
find the base of a power when we already know the value of that power and also the exponent. Assuming
that we have an exponentiation like following :

an  b
2. A root would give us the value of a , which satisfy a n  b :

an  b  n b  a
3. Basic properties of n th root of a number
n
n
1
a.b  n a . n b
a  an
a na
n
a n .b  a. n b n 
b nb
m n
a  m.n a 2n
a 2 n  a (n  N *)
m m
 a
n
 n am  a n
2 n 1
a 2 n 1  a (n  N )

4. Square root and its radicand condition


When n=2 , the operation now is an inverse of the square power . Square root of a given number is a non
negative number that must be multiplied times itself to equal the given number. The square root of a is
1
written a or a 2 . In this case we don’t have to add the number 2 on the radical sign.

Property 1.Condition of the radicand

Example : Square roots that meet the deterministic condition : 2, a 2 , a 2  2ab  b 2

a.The deterministic condition of 3x is 3x  0 , or x  0 , so the deterministic set of the variable is D   0,  


2y
b. The deterministic condition of is 3 x  0 , or x  0 , so the deterministic set of the variable is D  (0,  )
3x
Property 2. The two values

With every nonnegative number b, there are always two possible values of a that satisfies a 2  b respectively
signed as a  b and a   b , sometimes also signed briefly as  b .

Property 3. Basic rules of calculation

 x( x  0) a a a
x2  x    (  0, a  0, b  0)
 x( x  0) b b b
1
2
ab  a b a a

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy