- Order:
- Duration: 0:14
- Published: 11 Jan 2010
- Uploaded: 07 Aug 2010
- Author: gold4fish2
The decimal numeral system (also called base ten or occasionally denary) has ten as its base. It is the numerical base most widely used by modern civilizations.
Decimal notation often refers to a base-10 positional notation such as the Hindu-Arabic numeral system; however, it can also be used more generally to refer to non-positional systems such as Roman or Chinese numerals which are also based on powers of ten.
Decimals also refer to decimal fractions, either separately or in contrast to vulgar fractions. In this context, a decimal is a tenth part, and decimals become a series of nested tenths. There was a notation in use like 'tenth-metre', meaning the tenth decimal of the metre, currently an Angstrom. The contrast here is between decimals and vulgar fractions, and decimal divisions and other divisions of measures, like the inch. It is possible to follow a decimal expansion with a vulgar fraction; this is done with the recent divisions of the troy ounce, which has three places of decimals, followed by a trinary place.
However, when people who use Hindu-Arabic numerals speak of decimal notation, they often mean not just decimal numeration, as above, but also decimal fractions, all conveyed as part of a positional system. Positional decimal systems include a zero and use symbols (called digits) for the ten values (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9) to represent any number, no matter how large or how small. These digits are often used with a decimal separator which indicates the start of a fractional part, and with a symbol such as the plus sign + (for positive) or minus sign − (for negative) adjacent to the numeral to indicate whether it is greater or less than zero, respectively.
Positional notation uses positions for each power of ten: units, tens, hundreds, thousands, etc. The position of each digit within a number denotes the multiplier (power of ten) multiplied with that digit—each position has a value ten times that of the position to its right. There were at least two independent sources of positional decimal systems in ancient civilization: the Chinese counting rod system and the Hindu-Arabic numeral system (the latter descended from Brahmi numerals).
Ten is the number which is the count of fingers and thumbs on both hands (or toes on the feet). The English word digit as well as its translation in many languages is also the anatomical term for fingers and toes. In English, decimal (decimus < Lat.) means tenth, decimate means reduce by a tenth, and denary (denarius < Lat.) means the unit of ten.
The symbols for the digits in common use around the globe today are called Arabic numerals by Europeans and Indian numerals by Arabs, the two groups' terms both referring to the culture from which they learned the system. However, the symbols used in different areas are not identical; for instance, Western Arabic numerals (from which the European numerals are derived) differ from the forms used by other Arab cultures.
Decimal fractions are commonly expressed without a denominator, the decimal separator being inserted into the numerator (with leading zeros added if needed) at the position from the right corresponding to the power of ten of the denominator; e.g., 8/10, 83/100, 83/1000, and 8/10000 are expressed as 0.8, 0.83, 0.083, and 0.0008. In English-speaking and many Asian countries, a period (.) or raised period (·) is used as the decimal separator; in many other countries, a comma is used.
The integer part or integral part of a decimal number is the part to the left of the decimal separator (see also truncation). The part from the decimal separator to the right is the fractional part; if considered as a separate number, a zero is often written in front. Especially for negative numbers, we have to distinguish between the fractional part of the notation and the fractional part of the number itself, because the latter gets its own decimal sign. It is usual for a decimal number whose absolute value is less than one to have a leading zero.
Trailing zeros after the decimal point are not necessary, although in science, engineering and statistics they can be retained to indicate a required precision or to show a level of confidence in the accuracy of the number: Although 0.080 and 0.08 are numerically equal, in engineering 0.080 suggests a measurement with an error of up to one part in two thousand (±0.0005), while 0.08 suggests a measurement with an error of up to one in two hundred (see significant figures).
:1/2 = 0.5 :1/20 = 0.05 :1/5 = 0.2 :1/50 = 0.02
:1/4 = 0.25 :1/40 = 0.025 :1/25 = 0.04
:1/8 = 0.125 :1/125= 0.008
:1/10 = 0.1
If the rational number's denominator has any prime factors other than 2 or 5, it cannot be expressed as a finite decimal fraction, For external use by computer specialists, this binary representation is sometimes presented in the related octal or hexadecimal systems.
For most purposes, however, binary values are converted to or from the equivalent decimal values for presentation to or input from humans; computer programs express literals in decimal by default. (123.1, for example, is written as such in a computer program, even though many computer languages are unable to encode that number precisely.)
Both computer hardware and software also use internal representations which are effectively decimal for storing decimal values and doing arithmetic. Often this arithmetic is done on data which are encoded using some variant of binary-coded decimal, especially in database implementations, but there are other decimal representations in use (such as in the new IEEE 754 Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic).
Decimal arithmetic is used in computers so that decimal fractional results can be computed exactly, which is not possible using a binary fractional representation. This is often important for financial and other calculations.
The earliest evidence of positional numeral system appeared in 13th century B.C in Shang dynasty in China, and it was more advanced than contemporary Babylon and Egypt
In 1913, noted Japanese mathematics historian Yoshio Mikami wrote that counting rods were used since the year 542 BC. Counting rods (Y.Mikami called them "calculating pieces") are made of bamboo or wooden pieces of red and black colors, the red pieces representing positive numbers, and the black for negative numbers. Archaeological evidence indicated that a full-fledged, positional decimal system of numerals, known as the rod calculus, consisting of "hardware" (the counting rods) and "software" (Chinese multiplication table) with the associated arithmetic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division was fully developed in theSpring and Autumn period, Artifacts include forty Spring and Autumn period bamboo calculating rods of 12 inch each from Hunan Chang Sha Zhuo Gong mountain area, and a bundle of well preserved animal bone calculating rods stored in a silk pouch, unearthed from a West Han era tomb from Shanxi Qian Yang county. Most importantly, in 2002, Chinese archaeologists unearthed a wood script from a two-thousand-year-old site from the Warring States period, on which is written "four eight thirty two, five eight forty, six eight forty eight." This is the earliest discovered instance of a Chinese multiplication table, which is a prerequisite piece of "software" for carrying out positional decimal calculation with counting rods. Unlike the multiplication tables of other civilizations, the Chinese multiplication table in use since the Warring States contains at most 81 terms, from 9x9 to 1x1, consistent with a positional decimal rod calculus system. A non positional decimal system would require a much larger multiplication table. Chinese artifacts never evidence the need for a multiplication table larger the 9x9 terms from the antiquity of rod calculus to the era of the abacus.
Joseph Needham writes: "The Shang Chinese system, seems, then, the simplest of the ancient methods, and appeared two thousand years before the West inherited what are usually called the 'Arabic' numerals."
In short, full fledged positional decimal numerals in the form of counting rods was in use more than one millennium before the advent of Hindu-Arabic numerals. This gave the Chinese great advantage in computation, for instance Zu Chongzhi obtained the most accurate approximation for π for over nine hundred years. . However, Zu Chongzhi did not calculate π at all, but arrived to the value by the same geometric method which the Greek polymath Archimedes had used centuries earlier in the first known computation of pi.
China was the earliest civilization to adopt the concept of Hindu-Arabic numeral system
Comparison of the computation in Kitab al-Fusul fi al-Hisab al Hindi (925) by al-Uqlidisi, and another Latin translation of Arab manuscript written by the Persian mathematician Khwarizmi (825), uncovered almost identical algorithm for multiplication and division with the rod calculus described in Mathematical Classic of Sun Zi.In the case of division, the algorithm described by Khwarizmi and algorithm described by Sun Zi four hundred years earlier, are completely identical to the last detail: exactly the same three tier layout, exactly the same assignemt of dividend to the middle row, the same assignment of smaller divisor to the bottom row, padded with blank(!) but not "0" to the right, and quotient to top row padded with blanks(!) but not "0"s;identical alignment of the most significant digit, exactly the same way of calculating from left to right, exactly the same way of shifting divisor to the right one position after each step, up to presentation of the remainder in the form of counting rod fraction.Too identical to explained with independent development, further moving material rods on counting board to the right is a simple matter, on the other hand, moving written numbers right one step at each stage "is not conducive to a written system", as Lam Lay Yong put it
10th century Persian mathematician Kushyar ibn Labban's division algorithm described in his book Principles of Hindu Reckoning is also identical to Sunzi division 500 hundred years earlier. The similarity between ibn Labban's square root algorithm and Sunzi's square root algorithm is also "striking".
Historian of mathematic Lam Lay Yong suggests that "The fact that Arabs and the Chinese had identical expression of fractions, identical arithmetic procedures and identical expression of numerals cannot be dismissed as mere coincidence. Given that the Chinese had evolved all these forms and procedures at a significant earlier date, this inevitably points to the Chinese origin of the Hindu Arabic numeral system."
Georges Ifrah claims that the modern numeral system format, known as the Hindu-Arabic numeral system, originated in Indian mathematics by the 5th century CE. In the Lokavibhâga (The Parts of the Universe) uses both a concept of zero and also the place-value system. For example, "pañchabhyah khalu shûnyebhyah param dve sapta châmbaram ekam trîni cha rûpam cha" ("five voids, then two and seven, the sky, one and three and the form") is the expression of the number 13,107,200,000. This document, can be dated to the mid 5th century CE and is the oldest known Indian document to use these concepts. According to this theory, the ideas were transmitted to Chinese mathematics and Islamic mathematics during and after that time. It was notably introduced to the west through Khwārizmī's On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals.
Ifrah's work has been severely criticized by some scholars.
Immanuel Bonfils invented decimal fractions around 1350, anticipating Simon Stevin, but did not develop any notation to represent them.
The Persian mathematician Jamshīd al-Kāshī claimed to have discovered decimal fractions himself in the 15th century, though J. Lennart Berggren notes that positional decimal fractions were used five centuries before him by Arab mathematician Abu'l-Hasan al-Uqlidisi as early as the 10th century.
Khwarizmi introducted fraction to Islamic countries in the early 9th century, his fraction presentation was taken from traditional Chinese mathematical fraction. This form of fraction with numerator on top and denomiator at bottom without a horizontal bar was also used by 10th century Abu'l-Hasan al-Uqlidisi and 15th century Jamshīd al-Kāshī's work "Arithmetic Key".
A forerunner of modern European decimal notation was introduced by Simon Stevin in the 16th century.
Incan languages such as Quechua and Aymara have an almost straightforward decimal system, in which 11 is expressed as ten with one and 23 as two-ten with three.
Some psychologists suggest irregularities of the English names of numerals may hinder children's counting ability.
In addition, it has been suggested that many other cultures developed alternative numeral systems (although the extent is debated): Many or all of the Chumashan languages originally used a base 4 counting system, in which the names for numbers were structured according to multiples of 4 and 16. Many languages use quinary number systems, including Gumatj, Nunggubuyu, Kuurn Kopan Noot and Saraveca. Of these, Gumatj is the only true "5-25" language known, in which 25 is the higher group of 5. Some Nigerians use base 12 systems The Huli language of Papua New Guinea is reported to have base 15 numerals. Ngui means 15, ngui ki means 15×2 = 30, and ngui ngui means 15×15 = 225. Umbu-Ungu, also known as Kakoli, is reported to have base-24 numerals. Tokapu means 24, tokapu talu means 24×2 = 48, and tokapu tokapu means 24×24 = 576. Base 27 is used in two natural languages, the Telefol language and the Oksapmin language of Papua New Guinea. Ngiti is reported to have a base 32 numeral system with base 4 cycles.
Category:Elementary arithmetic Category:Fractions Category:Positional numeral systems Category:Indian inventions
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.