Number Systems
Class 9 Maths β’ Chapter 01 β’ Complete Study Guide
1. The Number Family
Understanding the hierarchy of numbers is the first step. Look at how each set of numbers fits inside the
next.
π§ Think First (No Guessing!)
Without flipping the cards, decide:
Is 0.1010010001... Rational or Irrational?
Reveal Answer
Irrational β because the pattern does NOT repeat.
Note: Irrational Numbers (\( T \)) are inside
Real Numbers but outside Rational Numbers.
Rational Numbers
Symbol: \( Q \)
Tap to flip
Definition
Can be written as \( \frac{p}{q} \), where \( p, q \) are integers, \( q \neq 0 \).
Examples: \( \frac{1}{2}, -5, 0, 0.333... \)
Irrational Numbers
Symbol: \( T \) or \( S \)
Tap to flip
Definition
Cannot be written as \( \frac{p}{q} \). Their decimal expansion is
non-terminating and non-recurring.
Examples: \( \sqrt{2}, \pi, 0.101001... \)
2. Locating \( \sqrt{2} \) on Number Line
How do we put an infinite decimal like \( \sqrt{2} \) on a line? We use Geometry (Pythagoras Theorem).
Step 1: The Setup
Draw a number line. Mark point '0' as O and '1' as A.
Step 2: Perpendicular Unit
Construct a unit length perpendicular AB at A.
Step 3: Hypotenuse
Join OB. By Pythagoras: \( OB = \sqrt{1^2 + 1^2} = \sqrt{2} \).
Step 4: The Arc
Using a compass with center O and radius OB, draw an arc cutting the number line at P.
3. Decimal Expansions
Identifying rational vs irrational numbers based on decimals.
| Type of Number |
Decimal Expansion |
Example |
| Rational |
Terminating |
\( \frac{7}{8} = 0.875 \) |
| Rational |
Non-terminating & Recurring |
\( \frac{10}{3} = 3.333... \) |
| Irrational |
Non-terminating & Non-recurring |
\( \sqrt{2} = 1.4142... \) |
π§© Is This Possible?
Decide YES or NO (with reason):
- Can a number be irrational and terminating?
- Can a rational number have infinite decimals?
- Can β9 be irrational?
Show Answers
- No β terminating decimals are rational
- Yes β if recurring (e.g., 1/3)
- No β β9 = 3 (rational)
Visualizing Successive Magnification
Let's find 3.765 on the number line.
Level 1: Between 3 and 4
3 --- 3.1 --- 3.2 ... 3.7 --- 3.8 ... 4
Level 2: Between 3.7 and 3.8
3.7 --- 3.71 ... 3.76 --- 3.77 ... 3.8
Level 3: Found it!
3.76 --- 3.761 ... 3.765 ... 3.77
target located!
4. Operations on Real Numbers
What happens when we mix Rational (Q) and Irrational (T) numbers?
General Rules:
- Rational \( \pm \) Irrational = Irrational
- Rational \( \times \) Irrational = Irrational (if rational \(\neq 0\))
- Irrational \( \pm/\times \) Irrational = Depends (Could be either)
Operations Checker
Select an operation to see the result type:
Click a button above
5. Rationalisation
Rationalisation means removing the square root from the denominator.
This identity creates a rational number from two irrationals. We use the conjugate (change the
sign in the middle) to rationalise.
Example: Rationalise \( \frac{1}{2 + \sqrt{3}} \)
Multiply num & den by \( 2 - \sqrt{3} \)
Denominator becomes \( (2)^2 - (\sqrt{3})^2
= 4 - 3 = 1 \)
Result: \( 2 - \sqrt{3} \)
6. Laws of Exponents
For \( a > 0 \) and rational \( p, q \):
| Rule |
Formula |
Example |
| Product |
\( a^p \cdot a^q = a^{p+q} \) |
\( 2^3 \cdot 2^2 = 2^5 \) |
| Power |
\( (a^p)^q = a^{pq} \) |
\( (2^3)^2 = 2^6 \) |
| Quotient |
\( \frac{a^p}{a^q} = a^{p-q} \) |
\( \frac{7^5}{7^3} = 7^2 \) |
| Negative |
\( a^{-p} = \frac{1}{a^p} \) |
\( 2^{-3} = \frac{1}{8} \) |
π― Exam Smart Zone
- CBSE asks β2 construction to test geometry + number sense
- Decimal expansion questions test classification, not calculation
- Rationalisation checks identity usage
- Laws of exponents often appear as simplification steps
Tip: Always mention reason β CBSE awards step marks.
Chapter Summary
Let's recap the key concepts before the quiz!
-
Rational Numbers (\(Q\)): Can be written as \( \frac{p}{q} \). Decimals are either
terminating or recurring.
-
Irrational Numbers (\(T\)): Cannot be written as \( \frac{p}{q} \). Decimals are
non-terminating and non-recurring (e.g., \( \sqrt{2}, \pi \)).
-
Real Numbers (\(R\)): The collection of all Rational and Irrational numbers. Every
real number represents a unique point on the number line.
-
Rationalisation: To remove a root from the denominator of \( \frac{1}{\sqrt{a} +
\sqrt{b}} \), multiply by the conjugate \( \sqrt{a} - \sqrt{b} \).
-
Laws of Exponents: Remember: \( a^m \cdot a^n = a^{m+n} \), \( (a^m)^n = a^{mn} \),
and \( a^0 = 1 \).
Chapter Quiz
1. Which is irrational?
A) \( \sqrt{4} \)
B) \( \sqrt{7} \)
C) 0.3333...
2. Value of \( (64)^{1/2} \) is:
A) 8
B) 4
C) 16
3. The decimal form of \( \frac{1}{11} \) is:
A) 0.09
B) \( 0.\overline{09} \)
C) 0.0909
β
Can You Say YES to All?
- I can classify any number instantly
- I know why β2 is irrational
- I can rationalise without memorising
- I understand exponent rules, not just apply them
If YES β youβre exam-ready π―
If NO β revise the marked section