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Ratio

In mathematics, a ratio (/ˈrʃ(i)/) shows how many times one number contains another. For example, if there are eight oranges and six lemons in a bowl of fruit, then the ratio of oranges to lemons is eight to six (that is, 8:6, which is equivalent to the ratio 4:3). Similarly, the ratio of lemons to oranges is 6:8 (or 3:4) and the ratio of oranges to the total amount of fruit is 8:14 (or 4:7).

The ratio of width to height of standard-definition television

The numbers in a ratio may be quantities of any kind, such as counts of people or objects, or such as measurements of lengths, weights, time, etc. In most contexts, both numbers are restricted to be positive.

A ratio may be specified either by giving both constituting numbers, written as "a to b" or "a:b", or by giving just the value of their quotient a/b.[1][2][3] Equal quotients correspond to equal ratios. A statement expressing the equality of two ratios is called a proportion.

Consequently, a ratio may be considered as an ordered pair of numbers, a fraction with the first number in the numerator and the second in the denominator, or as the value denoted by this fraction. Ratios of counts, given by (non-zero) natural numbers, are rational numbers, and may sometimes be natural numbers.

A more specific definition adopted in physical sciences (especially in metrology) for ratio is the dimensionless quotient between two physical quantities measured with the same unit.[4] A quotient of two quantities that are measured with different units may be called a rate.[5]

Notation and terminology edit

The ratio of numbers A and B can be expressed as:[6]

  • the ratio of A to B
  • A:B
  • A is to B (when followed by "as C is to D "; see below)
  • a fraction with A as numerator and B as denominator that represents the quotient (i.e., A divided by B, or  ). This can be expressed as a simple or a decimal fraction, or as a percentage, etc.[7]

When a ratio is written in the form A:B, the two-dot character is sometimes the colon punctuation mark.[8] In Unicode, this is U+003A : COLON, although Unicode also provides a dedicated ratio character, U+2236 RATIO.[9]

The numbers A and B are sometimes called terms of the ratio, with A being the antecedent and B being the consequent.[10]

A statement expressing the equality of two ratios A:B and C:D is called a proportion,[11] written as A:B = C:D or A:BC:D. This latter form, when spoken or written in the English language, is often expressed as

(A is to B) as (C is to D).

A, B, C and D are called the terms of the proportion. A and D are called its extremes, and B and C are called its means. The equality of three or more ratios, like A:B = C:D = E:F, is called a continued proportion.[12]

Ratios are sometimes used with three or even more terms, e.g., the proportion for the edge lengths of a "two by four" that is ten inches long is therefore

 
(unplaned measurements; the first two numbers are reduced slightly when the wood is planed smooth)

a good concrete mix (in volume units) is sometimes quoted as

 [13]

For a (rather dry) mixture of 4/1 parts in volume of cement to water, it could be said that the ratio of cement to water is 4:1, that there is 4 times as much cement as water, or that there is a quarter (1/4) as much water as cement.

The meaning of such a proportion of ratios with more than two terms is that the ratio of any two terms on the left-hand side is equal to the ratio of the corresponding two terms on the right-hand side.

History and etymology edit

It is possible to trace the origin of the word "ratio" to the Ancient Greek λόγος (logos). Early translators rendered this into Latin as ratio ("reason"; as in the word "rational"). A more modern interpretation[compared to?] of Euclid's meaning is more akin to computation or reckoning.[14] Medieval writers used the word proportio ("proportion") to indicate ratio and proportionalitas ("proportionality") for the equality of ratios.[15]

Euclid collected the results appearing in the Elements from earlier sources. The Pythagoreans developed a theory of ratio and proportion as applied to numbers.[16] The Pythagoreans' conception of number included only what would today be called rational numbers, casting doubt on the validity of the theory in geometry where, as the Pythagoreans also discovered, incommensurable ratios (corresponding to irrational numbers) exist. The discovery of a theory of ratios that does not assume commensurability is probably due to Eudoxus of Cnidus. The exposition of the theory of proportions that appears in Book VII of The Elements reflects the earlier theory of ratios of commensurables.[17]

The existence of multiple theories seems unnecessarily complex since ratios are, to a large extent, identified with quotients and their prospective values. However, this is a comparatively recent development, as can be seen from the fact that modern geometry textbooks still use distinct terminology and notation for ratios and quotients. The reasons for this are twofold: first, there was the previously mentioned reluctance to accept irrational numbers as true numbers, and second, the lack of a widely used symbolism to replace the already established terminology of ratios delayed the full acceptance of fractions as alternative until the 16th century.[18]

Euclid's definitions edit

Book V of Euclid's Elements has 18 definitions, all of which relate to ratios.[19] In addition, Euclid uses ideas that were in such common usage that he did not include definitions for them. The first two definitions say that a part of a quantity is another quantity that "measures" it and conversely, a multiple of a quantity is another quantity that it measures. In modern terminology, this means that a multiple of a quantity is that quantity multiplied by an integer greater than one—and a part of a quantity (meaning aliquot part) is a part that, when multiplied by an integer greater than one, gives the quantity.

Euclid does not define the term "measure" as used here, However, one may infer that if a quantity is taken as a unit of measurement, and a second quantity is given as an integral number of these units, then the first quantity measures the second. These definitions are repeated, nearly word for word, as definitions 3 and 5 in book VII.

Definition 3 describes what a ratio is in a general way. It is not rigorous in a mathematical sense and some have ascribed it to Euclid's editors rather than Euclid himself.[20] Euclid defines a ratio as between two quantities of the same type, so by this definition the ratios of two lengths or of two areas are defined, but not the ratio of a length and an area. Definition 4 makes this more rigorous. It states that a ratio of two quantities exists, when there is a multiple of each that exceeds the other. In modern notation, a ratio exists between quantities p and q, if there exist integers m and n such that mp>q and nq>p. This condition is known as the Archimedes property.

Definition 5 is the most complex and difficult. It defines what it means for two ratios to be equal. Today, this can be done by simply stating that ratios are equal when the quotients of the terms are equal, but such a definition would have been meaningless to Euclid. In modern notation, Euclid's definition of equality is that given quantities p, q, r and s, p:qr :s if and only if, for any positive integers m and n, np<mq, np=mq, or np>mq according as nr<ms, nr=ms, or nr>ms, respectively.[21] This definition has affinities with Dedekind cuts as, with n and q both positive, np stands to mq as p/q stands to the rational number m/n (dividing both terms by nq).[22]

Definition 6 says that quantities that have the same ratio are proportional or in proportion. Euclid uses the Greek ἀναλόγον (analogon), this has the same root as λόγος and is related to the English word "analog".

Definition 7 defines what it means for one ratio to be less than or greater than another and is based on the ideas present in definition 5. In modern notation it says that given quantities p, q, r and s, p:q>r:s if there are positive integers m and n so that np>mq and nrms.

As with definition 3, definition 8 is regarded by some as being a later insertion by Euclid's editors. It defines three terms p, q and r to be in proportion when p:qq:r. This is extended to 4 terms p, q, r and s as p:qq:rr:s, and so on. Sequences that have the property that the ratios of consecutive terms are equal are called geometric progressions. Definitions 9 and 10 apply this, saying that if p, q and r are in proportion then p:r is the duplicate ratio of p:q and if p, q, r and s are in proportion then p:s is the triplicate ratio of p:q.

Number of terms and use of fractions edit

In general, a comparison of the quantities of a two-entity ratio can be expressed as a fraction derived from the ratio. For example, in a ratio of 2:3, the amount, size, volume, or quantity of the first entity is   that of the second entity.

If there are 2 oranges and 3 apples, the ratio of oranges to apples is 2:3, and the ratio of oranges to the total number of pieces of fruit is 2:5. These ratios can also be expressed in fraction form: there are 2/3 as many oranges as apples, and 2/5 of the pieces of fruit are oranges. If orange juice concentrate is to be diluted with water in the ratio 1:4, then one part of concentrate is mixed with four parts of water, giving five parts total; the amount of orange juice concentrate is 1/4 the amount of water, while the amount of orange juice concentrate is 1/5 of the total liquid. In both ratios and fractions, it is important to be clear what is being compared to what, and beginners often make mistakes for this reason.

Fractions can also be inferred from ratios with more than two entities; however, a ratio with more than two entities cannot be completely converted into a single fraction, because a fraction can only compare two quantities. A separate fraction can be used to compare the quantities of any two of the entities covered by the ratio: for example, from a ratio of 2:3:7 we can infer that the quantity of the second entity is   that of the third entity.

Proportions and percentage ratios edit

If we multiply all quantities involved in a ratio by the same number, the ratio remains valid. For example, a ratio of 3:2 is the same as 12:8. It is usual either to reduce terms to the lowest common denominator, or to express them in parts per hundred (percent).

If a mixture contains substances A, B, C and D in the ratio 5:9:4:2 then there are 5 parts of A for every 9 parts of B, 4 parts of C and 2 parts of D. As 5+9+4+2=20, the total mixture contains 5/20 of A (5 parts out of 20), 9/20 of B, 4/20 of C, and 2/20 of D. If we divide all numbers by the total and multiply by 100, we have converted to percentages: 25% A, 45% B, 20% C, and 10% D (equivalent to writing the ratio as 25:45:20:10).

If the two or more ratio quantities encompass all of the quantities in a particular situation, it is said that "the whole" contains the sum of the parts: for example, a fruit basket containing two apples and three oranges and no other fruit is made up of two parts apples and three parts oranges. In this case,  , or 40% of the whole is apples and  , or 60% of the whole is oranges.for ratio it is 3;7. This comparison of a specific quantity to "the whole" is called a proportion.

If the ratio consists of only two values, it can be represented as a fraction, in particular as a decimal fraction. For example, older televisions have a 4:3 aspect ratio, which means that the width is 4/3 of the height (this can also be expressed as 1.33:1 or just 1.33 rounded to two decimal places). More recent widescreen TVs have a 16:9 aspect ratio, or 1.78 rounded to two decimal places. One of the popular widescreen movie formats is 2.35:1 or simply 2.35. Representing ratios as decimal fractions simplifies their comparison. When comparing 1.33, 1.78 and 2.35, it is obvious which format offers wider image. Such a comparison works only when values being compared are consistent, like always expressing width in relation to height.

Reduction edit

Ratios can be reduced (as fractions are) by dividing each quantity by the common factors of all the quantities. As for fractions, the simplest form is considered that in which the numbers in the ratio are the smallest possible integers.

Thus, the ratio 40:60 is equivalent in meaning to the ratio 2:3, the latter being obtained from the former by dividing both quantities by 20. Mathematically, we write 40:60 = 2:3, or equivalently 40:60∷2:3. The verbal equivalent is "40 is to 60 as 2 is to 3."

A ratio that has integers for both quantities and that cannot be reduced any further (using integers) is said to be in simplest form or lowest terms.

Sometimes it is useful to write a ratio in the form 1:x or x:1, where x is not necessarily an integer, to enable comparisons of different ratios. For example, the ratio 4:5 can be written as 1:1.25 (dividing both sides by 4) Alternatively, it can be written as 0.8:1 (dividing both sides by 5).

Where the context makes the meaning clear, a ratio in this form is sometimes written without the 1 and the ratio symbol (:), though, mathematically, this makes it a factor or multiplier.

Irrational ratios edit

Ratios may also be established between incommensurable quantities (quantities whose ratio, as value of a fraction, amounts to an irrational number). The earliest discovered example, found by the Pythagoreans, is the ratio of the length of the diagonal d to the length of a side s of a square, which is the square root of 2, formally   Another example is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, which is called π, and is not just an irrational number, but a transcendental number.

Also well known is the golden ratio of two (mostly) lengths a and b, which is defined by the proportion

  or, equivalently  

Taking the ratios as fractions and   as having the value x, yields the equation

  or  

which has the positive, irrational solution   Thus at least one of a and b has to be irrational for them to be in the golden ratio. An example of an occurrence of the golden ratio in math is as the limiting value of the ratio of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers: even though all these ratios are ratios of two integers and hence are rational, the limit of the sequence of these rational ratios is the irrational golden ratio.

Similarly, the silver ratio of a and b is defined by the proportion

  corresponding to  

This equation has the positive, irrational solution   so again at least one of the two quantities a and b in the silver ratio must be irrational.

Odds edit

Odds (as in gambling) are expressed as a ratio. For example, odds of "7 to 3 against" (7:3) mean that there are seven chances that the event will not happen to every three chances that it will happen. The probability of success is 30%. In every ten trials, there are expected to be three wins and seven losses.

Units edit

Ratios may be unitless, as in the case they relate quantities in units of the same dimension, even if their units of measurement are initially different. For example, the ratio 1 minute : 40 seconds can be reduced by changing the first value to 60 seconds, so the ratio becomes 60 seconds : 40 seconds. Once the units are the same, they can be omitted, and the ratio can be reduced to 3:2.

On the other hand, there are non-dimensionless quotients, also known as rates (sometimes also as ratios).[23][24] In chemistry, mass concentration ratios are usually expressed as weight/volume fractions. For example, a concentration of 3% w/v usually means 3 g of substance in every 100 mL of solution. This cannot be converted to a dimensionless ratio, as in weight/weight or volume/volume fractions.

Triangular coordinates edit

The locations of points relative to a triangle with vertices A, B, and C and sides AB, BC, and CA are often expressed in extended ratio form as triangular coordinates.

In barycentric coordinates, a point with coordinates α, β, γ is the point upon which a weightless sheet of metal in the shape and size of the triangle would exactly balance if weights were put on the vertices, with the ratio of the weights at A and B being α : β, the ratio of the weights at B and C being β : γ, and therefore the ratio of weights at A and C being α : γ.

In trilinear coordinates, a point with coordinates x :y :z has perpendicular distances to side BC (across from vertex A) and side CA (across from vertex B) in the ratio x :y, distances to side CA and side AB (across from C) in the ratio y :z, and therefore distances to sides BC and AB in the ratio x :z.

Since all information is expressed in terms of ratios (the individual numbers denoted by α, β, γ, x, y, and z have no meaning by themselves), a triangle analysis using barycentric or trilinear coordinates applies regardless of the size of the triangle.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ New International Encyclopedia
  2. ^ "Ratios". www.mathsisfun.com. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
  3. ^ Stapel, Elizabeth. "Ratios". Purplemath. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
  4. ^ "ISO 80000-1:2022(en) Quantities and units — Part 1: General". iso.org. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  5. ^ "The quotient of two numbers (or quantities); the relative sizes of two numbers (or quantities)", "The Mathematics Dictionary" [1]
  6. ^ New International Encyclopedia
  7. ^ Decimal fractions are frequently used in technological areas where ratio comparisons are important, such as aspect ratios (imaging), compression ratios (engines or data storage), etc.
  8. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. (2022-11-04). "Colon". MathWorld. Retrieved 2022-11-26.
  9. ^ "ASCII Punctuation" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 15.0. Unicode, Inc. 2022. Retrieved 2022-11-26. [003A is] also used to denote division or scale; for that mathematical use 2236 ∶ is preferred
  10. ^ from the Encyclopædia Britannica
  11. ^ Heath, p. 126
  12. ^ New International Encyclopedia
  13. ^ Belle Group concrete mixing hints
  14. ^ Penny Cyclopædia, p. 307
  15. ^ Smith, p. 478
  16. ^ Heath, p. 112
  17. ^ Heath, p. 113
  18. ^ Smith, p. 480
  19. ^ Heath, reference for section
  20. ^ "Geometry, Euclidean" Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition p682.
  21. ^ Heath p.114
  22. ^ Heath p. 125
  23. ^ David Ben-Chaim; Yaffa Keret; Bat-Sheva Ilany (2012). Ratio and Proportion: Research and Teaching in Mathematics Teachers. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9789460917844. "Velocity" can be defined as the ratio... "Population density" is the ratio... "Gasoline consumption" is measure as the ratio...
  24. ^ "Ratio as a Rate. The first type [of ratio] defined by Freudenthal, above, is known as rate, and illustrates a comparison between two variables with difference units. (...) A ratio of this sort produces a unique, new concept with its own entity, and this new concept is usually not considered a ratio, per se, but a rate or density.", "Ratio and Proportion: Research and Teaching in Mathematics Teachers" [2]

Further reading edit

  • "Ratio" The Penny Cyclopædia vol. 19, The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (1841) Charles Knight and Co., London pp. 307ff
  • "Proportion" New International Encyclopedia, Vol. 19 2nd ed. (1916) Dodd Mead & Co. pp270-271
  • "Ratio and Proportion" Fundamentals of practical mathematics, George Wentworth, David Eugene Smith, Herbert Druery Harper (1922) Ginn and Co. pp. 55ff
  • The thirteen books of Euclid's Elements, vol 2. trans. Sir Thomas Little Heath (1908). Cambridge Univ. Press. 1908. pp. 112ff.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • D.E. Smith, History of Mathematics, vol 2 Ginn and Company (1925) pp. 477ff. Reprinted 1958 by Dover Publications.

External links edit

ratio, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, grammatical, construction, mathematics, ratio, shows, many, times, number, contains, another, example, there, eight, oranges, lemons, bowl, fruit, then, ratio, oranges, lemons, eight, that, which, equivalent. For other uses see Ratio disambiguation is to redirects here For the grammatical construction see am to In mathematics a ratio ˈ r eɪ ʃ i oʊ shows how many times one number contains another For example if there are eight oranges and six lemons in a bowl of fruit then the ratio of oranges to lemons is eight to six that is 8 6 which is equivalent to the ratio 4 3 Similarly the ratio of lemons to oranges is 6 8 or 3 4 and the ratio of oranges to the total amount of fruit is 8 14 or 4 7 The ratio of width to height of standard definition televisionThe numbers in a ratio may be quantities of any kind such as counts of people or objects or such as measurements of lengths weights time etc In most contexts both numbers are restricted to be positive A ratio may be specified either by giving both constituting numbers written as a to b or a b or by giving just the value of their quotient a b 1 2 3 Equal quotients correspond to equal ratios A statement expressing the equality of two ratios is called a proportion Consequently a ratio may be considered as an ordered pair of numbers a fraction with the first number in the numerator and the second in the denominator or as the value denoted by this fraction Ratios of counts given by non zero natural numbers are rational numbers and may sometimes be natural numbers A more specific definition adopted in physical sciences especially in metrology for ratio is the dimensionless quotient between two physical quantities measured with the same unit 4 A quotient of two quantities that are measured with different units may be called a rate 5 Contents 1 Notation and terminology 2 History and etymology 2 1 Euclid s definitions 3 Number of terms and use of fractions 4 Proportions and percentage ratios 5 Reduction 6 Irrational ratios 7 Odds 8 Units 9 Triangular coordinates 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksNotation and terminology editThe ratio of numbers A and B can be expressed as 6 the ratio of A to B A B A is to B when followed by as C is to D see below a fraction with A as numerator and B as denominator that represents the quotient i e A divided by B or A B displaystyle tfrac A B nbsp This can be expressed as a simple or a decimal fraction or as a percentage etc 7 When a ratio is written in the form A B the two dot character is sometimes the colon punctuation mark 8 In Unicode this is U 003A COLON although Unicode also provides a dedicated ratio character U 2236 RATIO 9 The numbers A and B are sometimes called terms of the ratio with A being the antecedent and B being the consequent 10 A statement expressing the equality of two ratios A B and C D is called a proportion 11 written as A B C D or A B C D This latter form when spoken or written in the English language is often expressed as A is to B as C is to D A B C and D are called the terms of the proportion A and D are called its extremes and B and C are called its means The equality of three or more ratios like A B C D E F is called a continued proportion 12 Ratios are sometimes used with three or even more terms e g the proportion for the edge lengths of a two by four that is ten inches long is therefore thickness width length 2 4 10 displaystyle text thickness width length 2 4 10 nbsp unplaned measurements the first two numbers are reduced slightly when the wood is planed smooth a good concrete mix in volume units is sometimes quoted as cement sand gravel 1 2 4 displaystyle text cement sand gravel 1 2 4 nbsp 13 For a rather dry mixture of 4 1 parts in volume of cement to water it could be said that the ratio of cement to water is 4 1 that there is 4 times as much cement as water or that there is a quarter 1 4 as much water as cement The meaning of such a proportion of ratios with more than two terms is that the ratio of any two terms on the left hand side is equal to the ratio of the corresponding two terms on the right hand side History and etymology editIt is possible to trace the origin of the word ratio to the Ancient Greek logos logos Early translators rendered this into Latin as ratio reason as in the word rational A more modern interpretation compared to of Euclid s meaning is more akin to computation or reckoning 14 Medieval writers used the word proportio proportion to indicate ratio and proportionalitas proportionality for the equality of ratios 15 Euclid collected the results appearing in the Elements from earlier sources The Pythagoreans developed a theory of ratio and proportion as applied to numbers 16 The Pythagoreans conception of number included only what would today be called rational numbers casting doubt on the validity of the theory in geometry where as the Pythagoreans also discovered incommensurable ratios corresponding to irrational numbers exist The discovery of a theory of ratios that does not assume commensurability is probably due to Eudoxus of Cnidus The exposition of the theory of proportions that appears in Book VII of The Elements reflects the earlier theory of ratios of commensurables 17 The existence of multiple theories seems unnecessarily complex since ratios are to a large extent identified with quotients and their prospective values However this is a comparatively recent development as can be seen from the fact that modern geometry textbooks still use distinct terminology and notation for ratios and quotients The reasons for this are twofold first there was the previously mentioned reluctance to accept irrational numbers as true numbers and second the lack of a widely used symbolism to replace the already established terminology of ratios delayed the full acceptance of fractions as alternative until the 16th century 18 Euclid s definitions edit Book V of Euclid s Elements has 18 definitions all of which relate to ratios 19 In addition Euclid uses ideas that were in such common usage that he did not include definitions for them The first two definitions say that a part of a quantity is another quantity that measures it and conversely a multiple of a quantity is another quantity that it measures In modern terminology this means that a multiple of a quantity is that quantity multiplied by an integer greater than one and a part of a quantity meaning aliquot part is a part that when multiplied by an integer greater than one gives the quantity Euclid does not define the term measure as used here However one may infer that if a quantity is taken as a unit of measurement and a second quantity is given as an integral number of these units then the first quantity measures the second These definitions are repeated nearly word for word as definitions 3 and 5 in book VII Definition 3 describes what a ratio is in a general way It is not rigorous in a mathematical sense and some have ascribed it to Euclid s editors rather than Euclid himself 20 Euclid defines a ratio as between two quantities of the same type so by this definition the ratios of two lengths or of two areas are defined but not the ratio of a length and an area Definition 4 makes this more rigorous It states that a ratio of two quantities exists when there is a multiple of each that exceeds the other In modern notation a ratio exists between quantities p and q if there exist integers m and n such that mp gt q and nq gt p This condition is known as the Archimedes property Definition 5 is the most complex and difficult It defines what it means for two ratios to be equal Today this can be done by simply stating that ratios are equal when the quotients of the terms are equal but such a definition would have been meaningless to Euclid In modern notation Euclid s definition of equality is that given quantities p q r and s p q r s if and only if for any positive integers m and n np lt mq np mq or np gt mq according as nr lt ms nr ms or nr gt ms respectively 21 This definition has affinities with Dedekind cuts as with n and q both positive np stands to mq as p q stands to the rational number m n dividing both terms by nq 22 Definition 6 says that quantities that have the same ratio are proportional or in proportion Euclid uses the Greek ἀnalogon analogon this has the same root as logos and is related to the English word analog Definition 7 defines what it means for one ratio to be less than or greater than another and is based on the ideas present in definition 5 In modern notation it says that given quantities p q r and s p q gt r s if there are positive integers m and n so that np gt mq and nr ms As with definition 3 definition 8 is regarded by some as being a later insertion by Euclid s editors It defines three terms p q and r to be in proportion when p q q r This is extended to 4 terms p q r and s as p q q r r s and so on Sequences that have the property that the ratios of consecutive terms are equal are called geometric progressions Definitions 9 and 10 apply this saying that if p q and r are in proportion then p r is the duplicate ratio of p q and if p q r and s are in proportion then p s is the triplicate ratio of p q Number of terms and use of fractions editIn general a comparison of the quantities of a two entity ratio can be expressed as a fraction derived from the ratio For example in a ratio of 2 3 the amount size volume or quantity of the first entity is 2 3 displaystyle tfrac 2 3 nbsp that of the second entity If there are 2 oranges and 3 apples the ratio of oranges to apples is 2 3 and the ratio of oranges to the total number of pieces of fruit is 2 5 These ratios can also be expressed in fraction form there are 2 3 as many oranges as apples and 2 5 of the pieces of fruit are oranges If orange juice concentrate is to be diluted with water in the ratio 1 4 then one part of concentrate is mixed with four parts of water giving five parts total the amount of orange juice concentrate is 1 4 the amount of water while the amount of orange juice concentrate is 1 5 of the total liquid In both ratios and fractions it is important to be clear what is being compared to what and beginners often make mistakes for this reason Fractions can also be inferred from ratios with more than two entities however a ratio with more than two entities cannot be completely converted into a single fraction because a fraction can only compare two quantities A separate fraction can be used to compare the quantities of any two of the entities covered by the ratio for example from a ratio of 2 3 7 we can infer that the quantity of the second entity is 3 7 displaystyle tfrac 3 7 nbsp that of the third entity Proportions and percentage ratios editIf we multiply all quantities involved in a ratio by the same number the ratio remains valid For example a ratio of 3 2 is the same as 12 8 It is usual either to reduce terms to the lowest common denominator or to express them in parts per hundred percent If a mixture contains substances A B C and D in the ratio 5 9 4 2 then there are 5 parts of A for every 9 parts of B 4 parts of C and 2 parts of D As 5 9 4 2 20 the total mixture contains 5 20 of A 5 parts out of 20 9 20 of B 4 20 of C and 2 20 of D If we divide all numbers by the total and multiply by 100 we have converted to percentages 25 A 45 B 20 C and 10 D equivalent to writing the ratio as 25 45 20 10 If the two or more ratio quantities encompass all of the quantities in a particular situation it is said that the whole contains the sum of the parts for example a fruit basket containing two apples and three oranges and no other fruit is made up of two parts apples and three parts oranges In this case 2 5 displaystyle tfrac 2 5 nbsp or 40 of the whole is apples and 3 5 displaystyle tfrac 3 5 nbsp or 60 of the whole is oranges for ratio it is 3 7 This comparison of a specific quantity to the whole is called a proportion If the ratio consists of only two values it can be represented as a fraction in particular as a decimal fraction For example older televisions have a 4 3 aspect ratio which means that the width is 4 3 of the height this can also be expressed as 1 33 1 or just 1 33 rounded to two decimal places More recent widescreen TVs have a 16 9 aspect ratio or 1 78 rounded to two decimal places One of the popular widescreen movie formats is 2 35 1 or simply 2 35 Representing ratios as decimal fractions simplifies their comparison When comparing 1 33 1 78 and 2 35 it is obvious which format offers wider image Such a comparison works only when values being compared are consistent like always expressing width in relation to height Reduction editRatios can be reduced as fractions are by dividing each quantity by the common factors of all the quantities As for fractions the simplest form is considered that in which the numbers in the ratio are the smallest possible integers Thus the ratio 40 60 is equivalent in meaning to the ratio 2 3 the latter being obtained from the former by dividing both quantities by 20 Mathematically we write 40 60 2 3 or equivalently 40 60 2 3 The verbal equivalent is 40 is to 60 as 2 is to 3 A ratio that has integers for both quantities and that cannot be reduced any further using integers is said to be in simplest form or lowest terms Sometimes it is useful to write a ratio in the form 1 x or x 1 where x is not necessarily an integer to enable comparisons of different ratios For example the ratio 4 5 can be written as 1 1 25 dividing both sides by 4 Alternatively it can be written as 0 8 1 dividing both sides by 5 Where the context makes the meaning clear a ratio in this form is sometimes written without the 1 and the ratio symbol though mathematically this makes it a factor or multiplier Irrational ratios editRatios may also be established between incommensurable quantities quantities whose ratio as value of a fraction amounts to an irrational number The earliest discovered example found by the Pythagoreans is the ratio of the length of the diagonal d to the length of a side s of a square which is the square root of 2 formally a d 1 2 displaystyle a d 1 sqrt 2 nbsp Another example is the ratio of a circle s circumference to its diameter which is called p and is not just an irrational number but a transcendental number Also well known is the golden ratio of two mostly lengths a and b which is defined by the proportion a b a b a displaystyle a b a b a quad nbsp or equivalently a b 1 b a 1 displaystyle quad a b 1 b a 1 nbsp Taking the ratios as fractions and a b displaystyle a b nbsp as having the value x yields the equation x 1 1 x displaystyle x 1 tfrac 1 x quad nbsp or x 2 x 1 0 displaystyle quad x 2 x 1 0 nbsp which has the positive irrational solution x a b 1 5 2 displaystyle x tfrac a b tfrac 1 sqrt 5 2 nbsp Thus at least one of a and b has to be irrational for them to be in the golden ratio An example of an occurrence of the golden ratio in math is as the limiting value of the ratio of two consecutive Fibonacci numbers even though all these ratios are ratios of two integers and hence are rational the limit of the sequence of these rational ratios is the irrational golden ratio Similarly the silver ratio of a and b is defined by the proportion a b 2 a b a 2 b a 1 displaystyle a b 2a b a quad 2 b a 1 nbsp corresponding to x 2 2 x 1 0 displaystyle x 2 2x 1 0 nbsp This equation has the positive irrational solution x a b 1 2 displaystyle x tfrac a b 1 sqrt 2 nbsp so again at least one of the two quantities a and b in the silver ratio must be irrational Odds editMain article Odds Odds as in gambling are expressed as a ratio For example odds of 7 to 3 against 7 3 mean that there are seven chances that the event will not happen to every three chances that it will happen The probability of success is 30 In every ten trials there are expected to be three wins and seven losses Units editRatios may be unitless as in the case they relate quantities in units of the same dimension even if their units of measurement are initially different For example the ratio 1 minute 40 seconds can be reduced by changing the first value to 60 seconds so the ratio becomes 60 seconds 40 seconds Once the units are the same they can be omitted and the ratio can be reduced to 3 2 On the other hand there are non dimensionless quotients also known as rates sometimes also as ratios 23 24 In chemistry mass concentration ratios are usually expressed as weight volume fractions For example a concentration of 3 w v usually means 3 g of substance in every 100 mL of solution This cannot be converted to a dimensionless ratio as in weight weight or volume volume fractions Triangular coordinates editThe locations of points relative to a triangle with vertices A B and C and sides AB BC and CA are often expressed in extended ratio form as triangular coordinates In barycentric coordinates a point with coordinates a b g is the point upon which a weightless sheet of metal in the shape and size of the triangle would exactly balance if weights were put on the vertices with the ratio of the weights at A and B being a b the ratio of the weights at B and C being b g and therefore the ratio of weights at A and C being a g In trilinear coordinates a point with coordinates x y z has perpendicular distances to side BC across from vertex A and side CA across from vertex B in the ratio x y distances to side CA and side AB across from C in the ratio y z and therefore distances to sides BC and AB in the ratio x z Since all information is expressed in terms of ratios the individual numbers denoted by a b g x y and z have no meaning by themselves a triangle analysis using barycentric or trilinear coordinates applies regardless of the size of the triangle See also editDilution ratio Displacement length ratio Dimensionless quantity Financial ratio Fold change Interval music Odds ratio Parts per notation Price performance ratio Proportionality mathematics Ratio distribution Ratio estimator Rate mathematics Ratio Twitter Rate ratio Relative risk Rule of three mathematics Scale map Scale ratio Sex ratio Superparticular ratio SlopeReferences edit New International Encyclopedia Ratios www mathsisfun com Retrieved 2020 08 22 Stapel Elizabeth Ratios Purplemath Retrieved 2020 08 22 ISO 80000 1 2022 en Quantities and units Part 1 General iso org Retrieved 2023 07 23 The quotient of two numbers or quantities the relative sizes of two numbers or quantities The Mathematics Dictionary 1 New International Encyclopedia Decimal fractions are frequently used in technological areas where ratio comparisons are important such as aspect ratios imaging compression ratios engines or data storage etc Weisstein Eric W 2022 11 04 Colon MathWorld Retrieved 2022 11 26 ASCII Punctuation PDF The Unicode Standard Version 15 0 Unicode Inc 2022 Retrieved 2022 11 26 003A is also used to denote division or scale for that mathematical use 2236 is preferred from the Encyclopaedia Britannica Heath p 126 New International Encyclopedia Belle Group concrete mixing hints Penny Cyclopaedia p 307 Smith p 478 Heath p 112 Heath p 113 Smith p 480 Heath reference for section Geometry Euclidean Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition p682 Heath p 114 Heath p 125 David Ben Chaim Yaffa Keret Bat Sheva Ilany 2012 Ratio and Proportion Research and Teaching in Mathematics Teachers Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9789460917844 Velocity can be defined as the ratio Population density is the ratio Gasoline consumption is measure as the ratio Ratio as a Rate The first type of ratio defined by Freudenthal above is known as rate and illustrates a comparison between two variables with difference units A ratio of this sort produces a unique new concept with its own entity and this new concept is usually not considered a ratio per se but a rate or density Ratio and Proportion Research and Teaching in Mathematics Teachers 2 Further reading edit Ratio The Penny Cyclopaedia vol 19 The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge 1841 Charles Knight and Co London pp 307ff Proportion New International Encyclopedia Vol 19 2nd ed 1916 Dodd Mead amp Co pp270 271 Ratio and Proportion Fundamentals of practical mathematics George Wentworth David Eugene Smith Herbert Druery Harper 1922 Ginn and Co pp 55ff The thirteen books of Euclid s Elements vol 2 trans Sir Thomas Little Heath 1908 Cambridge Univ Press 1908 pp 112ff a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link D E Smith History of Mathematics vol 2 Ginn and Company 1925 pp 477ff Reprinted 1958 by Dover Publications External links edit nbsp Look up ratio in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ratio amp oldid 1182537306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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