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Seven is part of all of the following sets of numbers except

O irrational numbers
O integers
O rational numbers
natural numbers

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

irrational numbers

Explanation:

User DeLe
by
7.7k points
4 votes

Answer:

Seven isn't part of the set of irrational numbers.

Explanation:

Seven and the Set of all Natural Numbers

Start with the smallest set among the choices. The set of all natural numbers,
\mathbb{N}, starts with
0 (or
1, for some people.) A number
n is in
\mathbb{N}\!\!\! (write
n \in \mathbb{N}) if and only if
(n - 1) is in
\mathbb{N}\!. Conversely, if
n\! is indeed in
\mathbb{N}\!\!\!\!\!, then
(n + 1) would also be in
\mathbb{N}\!\!\!\!\!\!\!. For
7:


1 \in \mathbb{N} \implies 2 \in \mathbb{N}.


\vdots.


6 \in \mathbb{N} \implies 7 \in \mathbb{N}.

Therefore,
7 is indeed in the set of all natural numbers.

Seven and the Set of all Integers

Similarly, a number
n is in the set of integers,
\mathbb{Z}, if and only if either
(n - 1) or
(n + 1) is (or both are) in
\mathbb{Z}\!\!.

Conversely, if a number
n is in
\mathbb{Z}, then both
(n - 1) and
(n + 1) will be in
\mathbb{Z}\!.

It can be shown in a similar iterative way that
7 \in \mathbb{Z}.

Alternatively, consider the fact that the set of all natural numbers,
\mathbb{N}, is a subset of the set of all integers,
\mathbb{Z}. Therefore,
7 \in \mathbb{N} implies that
7 \in \mathbb{Z}.

Seven and the Set of all Rational Numbers

A number
m is a member of the set of all rational numbers
\mathbb{Q} if and only if there exists two integers
p and
q such that:


\displaystyle m = (p)/(q).


1 and
7 are both integers. If
p = 7 and
q = 1, then
\displaystyle 7 = (7)/(1) = (p)/(q). Hence,

Alternatively, note that the set of all integers,
\mathbb{Z}, is a subset of the set of all rational numbers,
\mathbb{Q}. Therefore, the fact that
7 \in \mathbb{Z} would imply that
7 \in \mathbb{Q}.

Seven and the Set of all Irrational Numbers

A number is in the set of all irrational numbers if and only if:

  • this number is in the set of all real numbers, and
  • this number is not in the set of all rational numbers. (Hence "irrational.")

Therefore, the fact that
7 is a rational number implies that it is not an irrational number.

User Collin Graves
by
7.8k points

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