Reducing Numerical Fractions To Simplest Form: The Mathematics 11 Competency Test
Reducing Numerical Fractions To Simplest Form: The Mathematics 11 Competency Test
Competency Test
42
to simplest form.
70
solution:
For this example, well go through the process step-by-step in some detail. Then well illustrate
the familiar shortcuts in a couple of examples.
The prime factorizations of the numerator and denominator here are easily obtained:
42 = 2 x 21 = 2 x 3 x 7
70 = 2 x 35 = 2 x 5 x 7
So, the numerator and denominator of the fraction we are given both contain the prime factor 2.
Thus
42
42
2 = 21
=
70 70
35
2
37
= 57
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35
70
is equivalent to 42
35
35
70
70
because it was
is still not in simplest form because the factorization of its numerator and denominator
(shown in brackets above) indicates that they both still contain a common prime factor of 7. so
21
42 21
3
=
= 7=
70 35 35
5
7
Thus, we have
42 3
= .
70 5
These two fractions, the original
42
70
42
70
effectively, 14, if you think of doing it in one step). Furthermore, the numerator and denominator
of
clearly do not share any further common prime factors, and so this simplification process
42
70
42
to simplest form.
70
solution:
Yes! This is the same problem as the first one. What we want to do here is show the shortcut
form of the strategy for simplifying fractions.
We begin as before by rewriting both the numerator and the denominator as a product of prime
factors:
42 2 3 7
=
70 2 5 7
Now, if you study the steps of the previous example, you will see that dividing the numerator and
denominator by 2 results in those two factors disappearing from each. We indicate this by
drawing slashes through them:
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42 2 3 7 3 7
=
=
70 2 5 7 5 7
Dividing the numerator and denominator in the resulting factored equation by 7 again just results
in those two factors of 7 disappearing from each. So again,
42 2 3 7 3 7 3
=
=
=
70 2 5 7 5 7 5
Now there are no common factors left in the numerator and denominator, so the process ends,
and we conclude that
42
70
In practice, this whole process is typically done in a single step, crossing out pairs of factors
without rewriting intermediate forms:
42 2 3 7 3
=
=
70 2 5 7 5
The way the simplification process is displayed in this second example is why people often refer
to it as cancelling common factors. You write the numerator and denominator as products of
prime factors. Then, if they have a prime factor in common, simply cancel it out in each. This
cancelling is the equivalent of dividing the numerator and denominator by that same value, so the
fraction that is left after cancelling a prime factor common to both numerator and denominator will
be equivalent to the original fraction, but of course, its denominator will be smaller. Then, just
repeat this cancelling process for every common factor in the numerator and denominator.
Example: Simplify
220
.
88
solution:
Very briefly, resolving the numerator and denominator into products of prime factors gives
220 = 2 x 2 x 5 x 11
and
88 = 2 x 2 x 2 x 11
So,
220 2 2 5 11 5
=
=
88
2 2 2 11 2
Thus, the simplest form of
220
88
is
improper fractions fractions in which the numerator is larger than the denominator.)
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Example: Reduce
234
to lowest terms.
315
solution:
234 = 2 x 3 x 3 x 13
and
315 = 3 x 3 x 5 x 7
So,
234 2 3 3 13 2 13 26
=
=
=
315
5 7 35
3 3 57
Since 26 and 35 share no factors in common, this is the simplest form to which we can reduce
the original fraction.
If you recognize a common factor in the numerator and denominator of a fraction, it is permissible
to cancel that factor as a way to get the fraction into a simpler form immediately. However, to
guarantee that your final result is the simplest form you must perform this systematic procedure.
It will be essential to use the systematic approach when we deal with the simplification of
algebraic fractions.
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