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B1 Intermediate English 14:27 Educational

All the Numbers - Numberphile

Numberphile · 1,762,678 views · Added 1 month ago

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

5/10

Difficulty

Subtitles (185 segments)

00:00

We're gonna do all the numbers. On Numberphile

00:02

we've done a lot of the numbers, some would say, but we haven't done all the numbers. Originally

00:06

we did the whole numbers. And these are the classics, my goodness. We've done 11, that was an early one.

00:12

We've done 3435, seventeen - right, all the whole numbers sit in here.

00:17

But then there are other types of numbers. If we go one step out, the rational numbers the ones that are ratios,

00:22

these are - you know, you get a seventeenth, you get I don't know things over twelve, you get all sorts of...

00:29

So now you've got all the rational numbers. We've gone beyond that though. And the rationals technically include the whole numbers,

00:33

they're a subset, but I'm doing this as what people call Venn diagram, which is wrong,

00:38

it's an Euler diagram. Because I'm not showing every single possible combination. - (Brady: Are negative numbers whole numbers?)

00:43

You know, I

00:44

put in a twelfth because I thought I was being hilarious and then I immediately thought, urgh I wasn't gonna put negatives on this diagram.

00:51

So I regret that, for two reasons. Opening the negative can and the expression on your face.

00:57

So I'm gonna make that a plus, there we are. In fact, this whole sheet of paper is just gonna be the

01:04

reals.

01:05

Positive re- you know, it works for negative reals, what am I saying? Have the negatives, it's fine.

01:10

But the sheet is - are all the reals and

01:13

inside here I've put whole numbers and then I've put rational numbers. If you - you can obviously get complex numbers coming up,

01:21

we're not gonna do that,

01:21

we're gonna stay down here. And I'm gonna gradually work our way out until we get a greater distance out

01:26

than Numberphile has ever gone before, right? We're going for the new Numberphile record: how far out into the weird reals

01:32

can we go? But we've done rational. Next one up the constructables. And these often aren't mentioned,

01:38

you don't have to add this in as a category, but I quite like constructables.

01:42

More importantly what people tend to go for, the next one out are the algebraic. Okay

01:47

so Simon did a fantastic video about algebraic numbers, and when you go outside,

01:52

transcendental numbers.

01:53

"I mean this number is really, really important and no one knew." - And so a lot of the number categories refer to in or out

01:58

of these different sets. So rational numbers are everything inside the blue line,

02:04

irrational numbers are everything outside the blue line.

02:06

You've got constructable numbers are anything inside the purple line, unconstructable numbers are outside this. And this light blue line out here:

02:14

algebraic numbers are everything inside there, and

02:17

transcendental numbers are everything

02:19

outside of there. And so constructable numbers are things that you can construct with a pencil and a compass and a ruler.

02:25

So Phi, you can do that, the golden ratio because you can do root 5, so you can get Phi.

02:29

You can do root 2, that lives in here,

02:32

that's kind of fun.

02:32

Algebraic numbers are the solution to an algebraic equation. If it's a square root or lower you can put it in constructable,

02:39

you can draw it. If it's higher than that

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