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Direct Proof and Counterexample II

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1 Direct Proof and Counterexample II
Lecture 13 Section 3.2 Wed, Feb 2, 2005

2 Rational Numbers A rational number is a number that equals the quotient of two integers. Let Q denote the set of rational numbers. An irrational number is a number that is not rational. We will assume that there exist irrational numbers.

3 Direct Proof Theorem: The sum of two rational numbers is rational.
Let r and s be rational numbers. Let r = a/b and s = c/d, where a, b, c, d are integers. Then r + s = (ad + bc)/bd, which is rational.

4 Proof by Counterexample
Disprove: The sum of two irrationals is irrational. Counterexample:

5 Proof by Counterexample
Disprove: The sum of two irrationals is irrational. Counterexample: Let α be irrational. Then -α is irrational. (proof?) α + (-α) = 0, which is rational.

6 Direct Proof Theorem: Between every two distinct rationals, there is a rational. Proof: Let r, s  Q. WOLOG* WMA† r < s. Let t = (r + s)/2. Then t  Q. (proof?) We must show that r < t < s. *WOLOG = Without loss of generality †WMA = We may assume

7 Proof, continued Given that r < s, it follows that
2r < r + s < 2s. Then divide by 2 to get r < (r + s)/2 < s. Therefore, r < t < s.

8 Other Theorems Theorem: Between every two distinct irrationals there is a rational. Proof: Difficult. Theorem: Between every two distinct irrationals there is an irrational.

9 An Interesting Question
Why are the last two theorems so hard to prove? Because they involve “negative” hypotheses and “negative” conclusions.

10 Positive and Negative Statements
A positive statement asserts the existence of a number. A negative statement asserts the nonexistence of a number. It is much easier to use a positive hypothesis than a negative hypothesis. It is much easier to prove a positive conclusion than a negative conclusion.

11 Positive and Negative Statements
“r is rational” is a positive statement. It asserts the existence of integers a and b such that r = a/b. “α is irrational” is a negative statement. It asserts the nonexistence of integers a and b such that α = a/b. Is there a “positive” characterization of irrational numbers?

12 Irrational Numbers Theorem: Let  be a real number  and define the two sets A = iPart({1, 2, 3, …}*( + 1)) and B = iPart({1, 2, 3, …}*(-1 + 1)). Then  is irrational if and only if A  B = N and A  B = .


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