We've seen how to add and subtract pairs of rational numbers. But the natural numbers have another operation on them: multiplication.
Remember, a given rational number represents what we get when we cut an apple into pieces all of the same size, then take some number [1] of the little pieces. The product of and [2] is what we call " multiplied by ", and it answers the question "What happens if we do the procedure that would make , but instead of starting by cutting one apple into pieces, we started by cutting apples into pieces?".
We write the product of and as .
It's hopefully easy to see that . Indeed, the definition is "what do we get if we would make , but instead of starting by cutting one apple, we started by cutting apple?"; but that's just the same! It's like saying "What if, instead of putting bread around my sandwich filling, I tried putting bread?" - I haven't actually changed anything, and I'll still get the same old sandwich [3] out at the end.
How about ? (Strictly speaking, I should probably be writing instead of , but this way saves a bit of writing. means "two copies of the thing I get when I cut an apple into one piece"; but an apple cut into one piece is just that apple, so just means two apples.) Well, that says "instead of cutting one apple, we cut two apples" into -sized pieces.
From now on, my pictures of apples will get even worse: rather than being circles, they'll now be squares. It just makes the diagrams easier to understand.
In the picture, we have two apples (squares) which I've drawn next to each other, separated by a dashed line. Then I've taken of the whole shape (shaded in red): that is, to the group of two apples I have done the procedure that would create if it were done to one apple alone.
Notice, though, that this divides neatly into of the left-hand apple, and of the right-hand apple. So the red-shaded area comes to , which you already know how to calculate: it is .
Can you work out, from the case of above, what is, where is an integer?
It is .
Indeed, the procedure to get is: we split into equal pieces, and then take of them. So the procedure to get is: we split into equal pieces, and then take of them.
But each of the pieces we've just made by splitting —that is, those demarcated by the longer solid lines in the diagram above—can be viewed as being copies of what we get by splitting . (In the diagram above, we have copies of that which we get by splitting : namely the two copies indicated by the dashed line.) So we can view the second procedure as: we split into equal pieces [4], and then take of them [5], and then do this times. %[6]
This produces pieces, each of size , and hence the rational number . %
You should check that you get the right answer for a different example: .
This is "do the procedure that makes , but instead of starting with , start with ".
So we take five anti-apples, and divide them into thirds (obtaining anti-chunks of size each, grouped as five groups of three); and then we take two chunks out of each group of three, obtaining anti-chunks of apple in total.
So , in accordance with the rule of .
Notice that while it was fairly obvious that order doesn't matter during addition (that is, ), because it's simply "putting two things next to each other and counting up what you've got", it's not all that obvious that the product of two fractions should be independent of the order we multiplied in. However, you should check, from the general expression above, that it actually is independent of the order.
Why is this? Why should it be that "do the procedure that made , but starting from instead of " and "do the procedure that made , but starting from instead of " give the same answer?
Well, remember the diagram we had for (remembering that that is "do the procedure that would make , but instead of doing it to , we do it to ):
What would we get if we rotated this diagram by a quarter-turn?
But wait! The shaded bit is just what we get when we do the procedure that makes (namely "put two copies of the shape next to each other"), but instead of doing it on the single (upper-most) square, we do it to the version of the number that is represented by the shaded bit of the upper-most square! And that is exactly what we would do to get .
In general, is the same as , because the two just "come from the same diagram, rotated by a quarter-turn". They are measuring the same amount of stuff, because the amount of stuff in a diagram doesn't change simply because we rotated it.
We'll do .
At this point, a digression is in order. We have already seen the notation for "take an apple; divide it into pieces, each -sized; and then take of the chunks". In the language of multiplication that we've now seen, that is "do what we would do to make , but do it starting from a -chunk instead of ". That is, is just .
And we can do that in a different way: we can take apples, divide each into chunks, and then just draw one of the chunks from each apple. In the language of multiplication, that is just "do what we would do to make a -chunk, but do it to instead of ". That is, .
Recalling that is just , our notation is simply the same as , as an instance of the "instant rule" .
Remember that we had "anti-apples" as a way of making nothing () by adding to some quantity of apples. In a similar vein, we can "invert" multiplication.
Whenever is not , we can find a rational number such that . (Notice that we've got as our "base point" now, rather than the that addition had.)
Indeed, using the instant rule, we see that , so to make we want to be the same as .
But we can do that: if we let and , we get the right thing, namely .
So works as an inverse to . And this is why we needed not to be : because isn't actually a rational number unless is nonzero.
We've seen how this definition follows from the instant rule. Where does it actually come from, though?
Possibly more than we actually made, and possibly negative!
Recall that is " copies of the little-piece we get when we cut an apple into equal pieces.
or
In the diagram above, there are such equal pieces, and right now we're looking only at one square, not at both squares joined together.
In the diagram above, is : this has given us the red shaded bit of one of the squares.
In the diagram above, is : we're finally looking at the two squares joined together into a rectangle.