this way is thepercentage. Thus we usually express 32/100 as ‘32 percent’ rather than as
its equivalent, ‘8 out of 25’!
Fractions are multiplied ‘top by top and bottom by bottom’ as you might expect:
m
n
×
p
q
=
mp
nq
(n,q= 0 ) e.g.
3
2
×
5
11
=
15
22
withpandqalso any integers. There may, of course, be common factors to cancel down,
as for example in
3
2
×
6
7
=
9
7
The inverse orreciprocalof a fraction is obtained by turning it upside down:
1
/(m
n
)
=
n
m
e.g. 1
/( 3
2
)
=
2
3
where bothmandnmust be non-zero. So dividing by a vulgar fraction is done by inverting
it and multiplying:
(
p
q
)
÷
(m
n
)
=
(
p
q
)/(
m
n
)
=
p
q
×
n
m
=
np
mq
e.g.
7
2
÷
14
6
=
7
2
×
6
14
=
3
2
Multiplication and division of fractions are therefore quite simple. Addition and subtrac-
tion are less so.
Two fractions with the same denominator are easily added or subtracted:
m
n
±
p
n
=
m±p
n
e.g.
3
2
−
1
2
=
3 − 1
2
=
2
2
= 1
So to add and subtract fractions in general we rewrite them all with the samecommon
denominator, which is thelowest common multipleof all the denominators. For example
3
4
−
4
3
=
3 × 3
12
−
4 × 4
12
=
9 − 16
12
=−
7
12
In the example, 12 is the LCM of 3 and 4.
An electrical example – resistances in parallel
Three resistancesR 1 ,R 2 ,R 3 connected in parallel are equivalent to a single resistanceR
given by
1
R
=
1
R 1
+
1
R 2
+
1
R 3
So, for example ifR 1 = 2 ,R 2 =^12 ,R 3 =^32 then
1
R
=
1
2
+ 2 +
2
3
(units of inverse ohms)