Number Systems — Class 9 (CBSE)
Mathematics has only one tool: the number. Every chapter of every class, from now till PhD, uses it. Class 9's Number Systems is where you stop treating numbers as a primary-school formality and start understanding what they actually are.
1. A 4000-year story in five acts
Before you learn the rules, see the story. Each act in this play is a real human moment when someone realised the existing numbers weren't enough.
Act I — Counting. A herder watches his goats wander out in the morning and back at sundown. To check none was lost, he matches each goat to a pebble. Natural numbers are born — for counting things.
Act II — Nothing. Indian mathematicians around 5th century CE write the symbol for zero (and call it shoonya). Counting becomes whole numbers . The world's bank balances now make sense.
Act III — Owing. Chinese merchants need to record debts. Negative numbers appear. Combined with the whole numbers, you get integers .
Act IV — Sharing. A baker cuts a loaf for three children. Integers can't describe a third of a loaf. Rational numbers appear — anything that can be written with . By 500 BCE, the Pythagoreans believe rationals are all the numbers there are.
Act V — The diagonal that broke a cult. Around 530 BCE, a Pythagorean named Hippasus proves that the diagonal of a unit square — which is — cannot be written as . Legend says he was drowned for blasphemy. Irrational numbers were so threatening they were murderous. Together with rationals they form the real numbers — every point on the number line.
You are now an heir to all five acts. Class 9 makes you fluent in them.
2. The big picture — one diagram
┌─────────────────────────────┐
│ REAL NUMBERS (ℝ) │
│ every point on the number │
│ line │
└─────────┬───────────────────┘
│
┌─────────────┴─────────────┐
│ │
RATIONALS (ℚ) IRRATIONALS
p/q form non-terminating,
terminating OR non-repeating decimals
repeating decimals e.g. √2, π, e, √3, √5
│
┌──────┴──────┐
│ │
INTEGERS (ℤ) FRACTIONS
…−2, −1, 0, 1, 2…
│
│
WHOLE NUMBERS (W)
0, 1, 2, 3, …
│
│
NATURAL NUMBERS (ℕ)
1, 2, 3, …
Read it bottom-up — each set is a superset of everything beneath it. Real numbers are the biggest set you'll meet in Class 9. (Class 11 adds complex numbers.)
3. Natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, rationals — recap
These four you've seen before but the language matters in the exam.
- Natural numbers — counting numbers. No zero.
- Whole numbers — naturals plus zero.
- Integers — whole numbers and their negatives. (From German Zahlen.)
- Rational numbers — numbers expressible as a fraction. (From quotient.)
Key fact. Every integer is rational (take ). So .
4. Between any two rationals there are infinitely many — the squeeze trick
A surprising fact: between any two distinct rationals, no matter how close, you can find another rational. And another. And another. Infinitely many.
The averaging trick. Between rationals and (with ), the mean is a rational that sits strictly between them.
Worked example. Find a rational between and .
Average: .
Check: , . Indeed . ✓
Repeat the trick to find a rational between and : average . And so on. The squeeze never stops.
Why this matters. "Between any two there are infinitely many" is called density of the rationals. It's a deep idea you'll use again in calculus when defining limits.
5. Irrational numbers — the gap in the rationals
If the rationals are so dense, surely every point on the number line is a rational? The Pythagoreans thought so. They were wrong.
Claim. is irrational. (It cannot be written as .)
Proof (by contradiction — a beautiful classic): Suppose where are integers with no common factor (lowest form), . Squaring: . So is even is even (the square of an odd number is odd). Write . Then . So is even is even. But then both and are even — they share a factor 2 — contradicting our "lowest form" assumption. Hence is not rational.
Other irrationals you'll see: , (made-up non-repeating). Any time a "" appears, it's irrational.
Together with the rationals, the irrationals fill in every gap on the number line. The result — every conceivable point on the line — is the set of real numbers .
6. Decimal expansions — the algorithm that classifies any number
You can always classify a number by its decimal expansion:
| Expansion type | What it is | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Terminating | Ends after finite digits | |
| Non-terminating but repeating | Goes on but cycles | |
| Non-terminating, non-repeating | Goes on forever, never cycles |
Theorem (decimal classification).
A real number is rational if and only if its decimal expansion is either terminating or non-terminating-but-repeating. It is irrational if and only if its expansion is non-terminating and non-repeating.
Converting a repeating decimal to — the standard trick:
Express as a fraction.
Let Multiply by (because the repeat block has 2 digits): Subtract:
Check: . ✓
Rule of thumb. If the repeat block is digits, multiply by and subtract.
7. When does a fraction give a terminating decimal?
Reduce to lowest terms. Then has a terminating decimal expansion if and only if the prime factorisation of consists only of s and s (no other prime).
Examples.
- — has only s → terminating. () ✓
- — only s and s → terminating. () ✓
- — has a → non-terminating but repeating. () ✓
- — has a → non-terminating, repeating. () ✓
Why? A terminating decimal is just a fraction with a power of 10 in the denominator: . If has any other prime factor, you can't possibly turn it into a power of 10.
8. Locating an irrational on the number line — the spiral construction
You can plot , , , … precisely on the number line using a Pythagorean spiral.
Constructing .
- Draw a number line. Mark at and at .
- At , draw a unit perpendicular up to a point .
- Join . By Pythagoras, .
- With as centre and radius , draw an arc cutting the number line at .
- The point corresponds to .
Constructing . From (which is away from ), draw a unit perpendicular to up to . Then . Sweep an arc.
Continue: The spiral is called the spiral of Theodorus.
Tip: in exams you'll often be asked to "represent on the number line." Always describe the construction step by step — diagram + procedure = full marks.
9. Operations on real numbers
Real numbers obey all the usual rules:
- Closure — sum, difference, product, quotient of two reals is a real (except division by 0).
- Commutative: ; .
- Associative: ; .
- Distributive: .
- Identity: ; .
- Inverse: ; (for ).
Rational + irrational?
The sum of a rational and an irrational is irrational. The product of a non-zero rational and an irrational is irrational. But the sum or product of two irrationals can be either rational or irrational.
Examples: (rational!), (rational!), but is irrational.
10. Surds and their laws
A surd is a root of a positive rational that comes out irrational — like .
Laws of surds (let ):
These four identities account for ~80% of all surd-manipulation marks in Class 9.
11. Rationalisation — moving the irrational out of the denominator
You cannot leave in a denominator. The conventional, marker-approved form moves it to the numerator. This is rationalisation.
Type A — Single surd in the denominator
Multiply numerator and denominator by the same surd.
Type B — Binomial denominator
Multiply numerator and denominator by the conjugate (flip the sign between the two terms).
Worked example (exam favourite — 3 marks).
Rationalise .
Multiply top and bottom by the conjugate :
Why does this work? kills the square root.
12. Laws of exponents (revisited for irrationals)
You learned these for rational exponents in Class 8. They extend cleanly to real exponents.
For and any real :
And: .
Worked example. Simplify .
.
Worked example 2. Simplify .
. Sum the exponents: .
13. Seven worked exam examples
Example 1 — Classify (1 mark)
Is rational or irrational? , an integer. Rational. (Always check if the radicand is a perfect square first.)
Example 2 — Insert (2 marks)
Insert three rationals between and . Convert to common denominator : . Now scale further to : and . Three rationals between: .
Example 3 — Decimal to fraction (3 marks)
Express as . Let . Then . Subtract: .
Example 4 — Rationalise (3 marks)
Rationalise . Multiply by conjugate : .
Example 5 — Exponents (2 marks)
Find the value of . .
Example 6 — Combined operations (4 marks, HOTS)
If and , find and .
(conjugate trick). . .
Example 7 — Locate (3 marks)
Locate on the number line. On the number line, mark at 0 and at 2. At , draw a unit perpendicular to . Then . With as centre and radius , draw an arc cutting the number line at . Point is .
14. Common pitfalls — the exam-killers
- Calling irrational. is a rational integer. Always check for perfect squares first.
- Leaving the denominator irrational. Mark-deductions are automatic.
- Sign-slip in the conjugate. , NOT . The minus comes from the conjugate .
- Multiplying surds incorrectly. (totally wrong). Only works.
- Forgetting "in lowest terms" before applying the terminating-decimal test. looks like it has only in the denominator, but reduce to first.
- Confusing "non-terminating" with "irrational." Non-terminating but repeating is still rational ().
- Saying "". is a useful approximation, but itself is irrational (genuine non-repeating).
15. Beyond NCERT — stretch problems
Stretch 1 — Olympiad classic
Prove is irrational. Adapt the proof: assume in lowest terms. Squaring: → divisible by 3 → divisible by 3. Write . Then → divisible by 3. Both share factor 3 — contradiction.
Stretch 2 — Density meets the irrationals
Find an irrational number between and . — a number with non-repeating zero patterns lies between and .
Stretch 3 — Continued fraction (a peek into Class 12 / college)
can be written as a never-ending fraction: . The deeper you go, the closer you get to the true . (You don't need this for exams — just appreciate that even infinite expressions can be precise.)
16. Real-world number systems
- Computers store reals approximately. A float is a rational — there's no way to store exactly in any computer. Hence the famous bug.
- Music is irrational. The 12-tone equal temperament scale uses the twelfth root of 2 between consecutive notes — an irrational that makes harmony work.
- The golden ratio is irrational and appears in flower petal counts, the Parthenon's proportions, and stock-market technical analysis.
- appears in probability (yes, prime-distribution problems use even though they have nothing to do with circles), in heat flow, and in quantum mechanics.
17. CBSE exam blueprint
| Question type | Marks | Typical question | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| VSA | 1 | Classify a number; identify a perfect square; simple exponents | 30 s |
| SA-I | 2 | Insert rationals between two given values; simple rationalisation | 2 min |
| SA-II | 3 | Express a recurring decimal as ; rationalise a binomial denominator | 4–5 min |
| LA | 4 | HOTS — combined surd manipulation; "find given " | 6–8 min |
Total marks: typically 6–8 / 80. This chapter is a high-value, easy-to-score chapter — if you've practised, expect ≥ 90% of the marks.
Exam-day strategy.
- Memorise the seven surd identities (Section 10). They appear in every paper.
- Always reduce to lowest terms before applying the terminating-decimal test.
- For "find a^2 + b^2 given a" type questions, the magic trick is or . Use conjugates.
18. 60-second recap
- Sets: . Irrationals + rationals = reals.
- Density: between any two rationals, infinitely many rationals.
- proof is the classic proof-by-contradiction — memorise the structure.
- Decimal classification: terminating or repeating ⇔ rational; non-repeating ⇔ irrational.
- Terminating-decimal test: in lowest terms, denominator must be .
- Rationalisation: multiply by conjugate.
- Surd laws: , .
- Exponent laws extend to all real exponents.
Take the practice quiz and the flashcard deck before moving to Polynomials.
