Inverse Property of Multiplication

Use the Inverse Properties of Addition and Multiplication

What number multiplied by  \frac {2}{3} gives multiplicative identity, 1? In other words, two-thirds times what results in 1?

 \frac {2}{3} \cdot \text{____} =1
We know \frac{2}{3} \cdot \frac{3}{2}=1


What number multiplied by 2 gives the multiplicative identity, 1? In other words two times what results in 1?

 2 \cdot \text{____} =1
We know 2 \cdot \frac{1}{2}=1


Notice that in each case, the missing number was the reciprocal of the number.

We call  \frac {1}{a} the multiplicative inverse of  a(a≠0). The reciprocal of a number is its multiplicative inverse. A number and its reciprocal multiply to  1, which is the multiplicative identity.


INVERSE PROPERTIES

Inverse Property of Addition for any real number  a,

 a+(−a)=0

 -a \text { is the additive inverse of a.}

Inverse Property of Multiplication for any real number  a ≠ 0,

 a \cdot \frac {1}{a} = 1

 \frac {1}{a} \text { is the multiplicative inverse of a.}



Source: Rice University, https://openstax.org/books/prealgebra/pages/7-4-properties-of-identity-inverses-and-zero
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.