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  2. Irrational number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrational_number

    An example of an irrational algebraic number is x 0 = (2 1/2 + 1) 1/3. It is clearly algebraic since it is the root of an integer polynomial, ) = ...

  3. List of types of numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_types_of_numbers

    All rational numbers are real, but the converse is not true. Irrational numbers (): Real numbers that are not rational. Imaginary numbers: Numbers that equal the product of a real number and the imaginary unit , where =. The number 0 is both real and imaginary.

  4. Normal number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_number

    A number normal in base b is rich in base b, but not necessarily conversely. The real number x is rich in base b if and only if the set {x b n mod 1 : n ∈ N} is dense in the unit interval. [11] [12] We defined a number to be simply normal in base b if each individual digit appears with frequency 1 ⁄ b.

  5. Category:Irrational numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Irrational_numbers

    In mathematics, an irrational number is any real number that is not a rational number, i.e., one that cannot be written as a fraction a / b with a and b integers and b not zero. This is also known as being incommensurable, or without common measure. The irrational numbers are precisely those numbers whose expansion in any given base (decimal ...

  6. Irrationality sequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrationality_sequence

    The powers of two whose exponents are powers of two, , form an irrationality sequence.However, although Sylvester's sequence. 2, 3, 7, 43, 1807, 3263443, ... (in which each term is one more than the product of all previous terms) also grows doubly exponentially, it does not form an irrationality sequence.

  7. Square root of 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_root_of_2

    Technically, it should be called the principal square root of 2, to distinguish it from the negative number with the same property. Geometrically, the square root of 2 is the length of a diagonal across a square with sides of one unit of length; this follows from the Pythagorean theorem. It was probably the first number known to be irrational. [1]

  8. Irrationality measure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrationality_measure

    Rational numbers have irrationality exponent 1, while (as a consequence of Dirichlet's approximation theorem) every irrational number has irrationality exponent at least 2. On the other hand, an application of Borel-Cantelli lemma shows that almost all numbers, including all algebraic irrational numbers , have an irrationality exponent exactly ...

  9. Dense-in-itself - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dense-in-itself

    A simple example of a set that is dense-in-itself but not closed (and hence not a perfect set) is the set of irrational numbers (considered as a subset of the real numbers). This set is dense-in-itself because every neighborhood of an irrational number contains at least one other irrational number .

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