Division by Zero
Mathematics is unique in that it is an objective subject. When answering a question, something is either empirically true or it is completely false; there is little if any subjectivity about it in most situations. One of the most interesting aspects about math is that there are certain laws which are irrefutable and must be accepted in order for the correct answer to be discovered. A particularly intriguing and potentially frustrating aspect of math has to do with the division of zero. According to the laws of math, division by zero is impossible. When someone solves a problem and finds themselves with a fraction where zero is in the denominator, the answer is always undefined because in mathematics, there is no such number. Mathematically, it is not possible to divide a numerator by zero and have either a real or imaginary number for an answer.
There are four basic functions of mathematics: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and of course division. Division is the process of separating a larger number into an equal number of pieces (Fosnot and Dolk 2001). For example, the number four divided by the number two creates two pieces of equal size. We say that two goes into four two times because two multiplied by two is equal to the number four. For a mathematical statement to be true, its reverse must be proven to be true as well. Division is the opposite mathematical concept of multiplication, just as subtraction is the mathematical opposite of addition. If two numbers multiplied is equal to an answer, then that answer divided by one of the numbers in the original problem must provide the other multiplier. If the reverse operation cannot be performed, then this poses a serious problem.
Mathematician Charles Seife writes:
Zero is behind all of the big puzzles in physics. The infinite density of the black hole is a division by zero. The big bang creation from the void is a division by zero. The infinite energy of the vacuum is a division by zero. Yet dividing by zero destroys...
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