Proportionality (mathematics)
In mathematics, two sequences of numbers, often experimental data, are proportional or directly proportional if their corresponding elements have a constant ratio. The ratio is called coefficient of proportionality (or proportionality constant) and its reciprocal is known as constant of normalization (or normalizing constant). Two sequences are inversely proportional if corresponding elements have a constant product, also called the coefficient of proportionality.
This definition is commonly extended to related varying quantities, which are often called variables. This meaning of variable is not the common meaning of the term in mathematics (see variable (mathematics)); these two different concepts share the same name for historical reasons.
Two functions [math]\displaystyle{ f(x) }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ g(x) }[/math] are proportional if their ratio [math]\displaystyle{ \frac{f(x)}{g(x)} }[/math] is a constant function.
If several pairs of variables share the same direct proportionality constant, the equation expressing the equality of these ratios is called a proportion, e.g., a/b = x/y = ⋯ = k (for details see Ratio). Proportionality is closely related to linearity.
Direct proportionality
Given an independent variable x and a dependent variable y, y is directly proportional to x[1] if there is a non-zero constant k such that:
- [math]\displaystyle{ y = kx }[/math]
The relation is often denoted using the symbols "∝" (not to be confused with the Greek letter alpha) or "~", with exception of Japanese texts, where "~" is reserved for intervals:
- [math]\displaystyle{ y \propto x }[/math] (or [math]\displaystyle{ y \sim x }[/math])
For [math]\displaystyle{ x \ne 0 }[/math] the proportionality constant can be expressed as the ratio:
- [math]\displaystyle{ k = \frac{y}{x} }[/math]
It is also called the constant of variation or constant of proportionality.
A direct proportionality can also be viewed as a linear equation in two variables with a y-intercept of 0 and a slope of k. This corresponds to linear growth.
Examples
- If an object travels at a constant speed, then the distance traveled is directly proportional to the time spent traveling, with the speed being the constant of proportionality.
- The circumference of a circle is directly proportional to its diameter, with the constant of proportionality equal to π.
- On a map of a sufficiently small geographical area, drawn to scale distances, the distance between any two points on the map is directly proportional to the beeline distance between the two locations represented by those points; the constant of proportionality is the scale of the map.
- The force, acting on a small object with small mass by a nearby large extended mass due to gravity, is directly proportional to the object's mass; the constant of proportionality between the force and the mass is known as gravitational acceleration.
- The net force acting on an object is proportional to the acceleration of that object with respect to an inertial frame of reference. The constant of proportionality in this, Newton's second law, is the classical mass of the object.
Inverse proportionality
Two variables are inversely proportional (also called varying inversely, in inverse variation, in inverse proportion)[2] if each of the variables is directly proportional to the multiplicative inverse (reciprocal) of the other, or equivalently if their product is a constant.[3] It follows that the variable y is inversely proportional to the variable x if there exists a non-zero constant k such that
- [math]\displaystyle{ y = \frac{k}{x} }[/math]
or equivalently, [math]\displaystyle{ xy = k }[/math]. Hence the constant "k" is the product of x and y.
The graph of two variables varying inversely on the Cartesian coordinate plane is a rectangular hyperbola. The product of the x and y values of each point on the curve equals the constant of proportionality (k). Since neither x nor y can equal zero (because k is non-zero), the graph never crosses either axis.
Direct and inverse proportion contrast as follows: in direct proportion the variables increase or decrease together. With inverse proportion, an increase in one variable is associated with a decrease in the other. For instance, in travel, a constant speed dictates a direct proportion between distance and time travelled; in contrast, for a given distance (the constant), the time of travel is inversely proportional to speed: s × t = d.
Hyperbolic coordinates
The concepts of direct and inverse proportion lead to the location of points in the Cartesian plane by hyperbolic coordinates; the two coordinates correspond to the constant of direct proportionality that specifies a point as being on a particular ray and the constant of inverse proportionality that specifies a point as being on a particular hyperbola.
Computer encoding
The Unicode characters for proportionality are the following:
- U+221D ∝ PROPORTIONAL TO (HTML
∝
·∝
) - U+007E ~ TILDE (HTML
~
) - U+2237 ∷ PROPORTION
- U+223C ∼ TILDE OPERATOR (HTML
∼
·∼
) - U+223A ∺ GEOMETRIC PROPORTION (HTML
∺
)
See also
- Linear map
- Correlation
- Eudoxus of Cnidus
- Golden ratio
- Inverse-square law
- Proportional font
- Ratio
- Rule of three (mathematics)
- Sample size
- Similarity
- Basic proportionality theorem
- Growth
- Linear growth
- Hyperbolic growth
Notes
- ↑ Weisstein, Eric W. "Directly Proportional". MathWorld – A Wolfram Web Resource.
- ↑ "Inverse variation". https://www.math.net/inverse-variation.
- ↑ Weisstein, Eric W. "Inversely Proportional". MathWorld – A Wolfram Web Resource.
References
- Ya. B. Zeldovich, I. M. Yaglom: Higher math for beginners, p. 34–35.
- Brian Burrell: Merriam-Webster's Guide to Everyday Math: A Home and Business Reference. Merriam-Webster, 1998, ISBN 9780877796213, p. 85–101.
- Lanius, Cynthia S.; Williams Susan E.: PROPORTIONALITY: A Unifying Theme for the Middle Grades. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 8.8 (2003), p. 392–396.
- Seeley, Cathy; Schielack Jane F.: A Look at the Development of Ratios, Rates, and Proportionality. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 13.3, 2007, p. 140–142.
- Van Dooren, Wim; De Bock Dirk; Evers Marleen; Verschaffel Lieven : Students' Overuse of Proportionality on Missing-Value Problems: How Numbers May Change Solutions. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 40.2, 2009, p. 187–211.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportionality (mathematics).
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