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New numbers from old
Leopold Kronecker
Nineteenth-century German mathematician Leopold Kronecker once said
God created the integers, all the rest is the work of man.We make rational numbers from the integers by allowing division by integers other than zero. Rational numbers were all the Greeks allowed (in fact, they didn't allow negative quantities to stand on their own, so really they only worked with positive rationals). This left them confused - and sometimes frightened - when geometric results such as Pythagoras' Theorem seemed to imply that rational numbers weren't enough.
If you use Pythagoras' Theorem on a right-angled triangle with
the two shorter sides of length 1 unit, you quickly realise that
the square of the length of the hypotenuse is 2. So what is the
length of the hypotenuse? Well, it's
- but what fraction
is that? The answer is that it isn't one -
is an
irrational number, that is, one that can't be represented
by any fraction of two integers. Modern-day mathematicians call the
rational
and irrational numbers together the real numbers, and
if all you want to do is to talk about lengths, they are all you need.
We can think of real numbers as something we get from rationals by
taking limits of infinite sequences - for example, a non-terminating
decimal is the limit of all of its finite decimal approximations.
The square root of 2 is irrational
The first thing you might ask if you saw this definition is -
are there any irrational numbers? How do we know that
, say, is irrational?
To prove that
is irrational, suppose the contrary, namely
that it is rational, so that there are integers
and
such that
We can also assume that
Now suppose
But this isn't possible, because the right hand side is odd, but the left hand side is even.
This contradiction means that
is even, so it can be
written as
for some integer
. Substituting
into the formula
we get that
Dividing across by 2, this means that
so
Algebraic and Transcendental numbers
Although
Numbers like
, which are the solutions to polynomial
equations
with integer coefficients, are called algebraic, and although
an algebraic
number may be irrational, it can still be thought of as simple in
some sense. But there are numbers which are the solution of no
such equation, and such numbers are called transcendental.
Since rational numbers are clearly algebraic, the real numbers can
be divided into two sets - the algebraic numbers and the
transcendental numbers.
It is remarkably hard, and may even be impossible, to tell whether a
certain number
is algebraic or transcendental. It is known that the two most famous
irrational
numbers -
and
- are both transcendental. The fact that
is transcendental means that one of the most famous problems of
antiquity -
that of squaring the circle - can never be solved.
Squaring the circle
The problem of squaring the circle is to find a construction, using only a straight-edge and compass, to give a square of the same area as a given circle. Since doing this would amount to finding a polynomial expression for
Ferdinand von Lindemann
The result was proved in 1882 by German mathematician Ferdinand von Lindemann - but amazingly amateur mathematicians have continued to produce fallacious "proofs" that the circle can be squared to this day!
Some of the most bizarre attempts have involved
proposing a different and rational value for
, which would
of course be useful if we could do it, but naturally
there would be
consequences for the rest of mathematics.
In 1897, the Indiana State Legislature
almost went as far as legislating to set the value of
equal to 3! The bill was never actually passed, but it came within
a hair's breadth of becoming law.
Long before
was finally proved to be transcendental most learned societies
had stopped considering circle-squaring arguments sent to them -
even though proof of its impossibility was lacking, most
professional mathematicians thought it would never be done.
Sums and Products
Despite the fact that
Aleksandr Gelfond
Surprisingly, it is quite easy
to prove that
is transcendental.
This follows from a theorem proved by two mathematicians,
Aleksandr
Gelfond and Theodor Schneider independently in 1934.
The
Gelfond-Schneider Theorem says that if
and
are algebraic,
is not 0 or 1,
and
is not rational, then
is transcendental.
We use probably the most famous result in all of
mathematics, Euler's formula
Taking both sides to the power
Since the theorem tells us that the left hand side is transcendental, it follows that the right hand side is too.
It also follows that
and
are not both algebraic, because
if they were, then the equation
would have roots
Of course, this proof doesn't tell us which of
and
is transcendental, or suggest
any way to solve the mystery.
For more about this most mysterious number, have a look at Pi not a piece of cake in the news section of this issue of Plus.
About the author
Helen Joyce is editor of Plus.




