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Real Numbers made easy Class 10 CBSE notes

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NCERT CBSE CLASS 10 Mathematics notes for the very first chapter Real Numbers made easy in a single pdf. Ensures that the language is easy to be understood by every student Each important concept is explained in detail

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Class 10 Maths Chapter 1 Notes
Real Numbers (CBSE)


What are Real Numbers?
Real numbers include all the numbers we generally use: positive numbers, negative numbers,
fractions, decimals, and irrational numbers.​
The only numbers not in this category are imaginary numbers (like numbers involving i).

Examples:

●​ Integers: -8, 0, 5​

●​ Fractions: 3/4, -7/2​

●​ Decimals: 2.71, -4.5​

●​ Irrational numbers: √3, π​


Important points:

●​ Real numbers are made up of rational and irrational numbers together.​

●​ Any real number can be shown on the number line.​




Euclid’s Division Lemma
Statement:​
Given two positive integers a and b (where a > b), there exist unique integers q and r such that​
a = b × q + r, where 0 ≤ r < b.

Example:​
Take a = 45 and b = 7.​

, Then​
45 = 7 × 6 + 3​
So, q = 6 and r = 3.




Euclid’s Division Algorithm
This is a process based on Euclid’s Lemma to find the HCF (Highest Common Factor) of two
numbers.

Steps:

1.​ Divide the larger number by the smaller number and get the remainder.​

2.​ If the remainder is zero, the divisor is the HCF.​

3.​ If not, take the divisor and remainder as the new pair, and repeat the process until you
get a remainder of zero.​


Example:​
Find HCF of 84 and 32.​
84 = 32 × 2 + 20​
32 = 20 × 1 + 12​
20 = 12 × 1 + 8​
12 = 8 × 1 + 4​
8 = 4 × 2 + 0​
So, HCF = 4.




The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic
This theorem says that every composite number can be written uniquely (apart from the order)
as a product of prime numbers.

Example:​
90 = 2 × 3 × 3 × 5​
If written differently, like 3 × 2 × 5 × 3, it still has the same prime factors.

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