0 and 100.
The difference of their cubes is 4.
the difference is also doubled
In mathematics, the term "difference" refers to the result of subtracting one number from another. For example, the difference of 5 could refer to subtracting 5 from a number, such as 10 - 5 = 5. It can also mean the difference between two numbers, like 8 and 3, where the difference is 5 (8 - 3 = 5). Essentially, the difference is the value that represents how far apart two numbers are on a number line.
natural numbers are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5..........whole numbers are natural numbers including 0, i.e., 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5..........
Yes, real numbers are closed under subtraction. This means that when you subtract any two real numbers, the result is always another real number. For example, if you take two real numbers, such as 5 and 3, their difference (5 - 3) is 2, which is also a real number. Therefore, the set of real numbers remains intact under the operation of subtraction.
Any two numbers such that when 6 is added to the smaller number the sum equals the greater number. For example. 1 and 7 have a difference of 6 as, 1 + 6 = 7 Also, 312 and 318 as 312 + 6 = 318 And you can think of many other pairs of numbers that have this same property.
A natural number is a counting number, such as 1, 2, 3. There are also known as whole numbers and integers. They can be infinitely large. A real number is a number, possibly a natural number, but more possibly not, because there are an infinite number of real numbers that lie between any two natural numbers, such as 1, 1.1, 1.11, 1.111, 111112, etc, ad infinitum. Real numbers can also be infinitely large.
A surd is a number expressed as a square root (or some other root). Such roots are usually irrational; but irrational numbers also include other numbers, which CAN'T be expressed as the root of a rational number. For example, pi and e.
Imaginary number is a number that consist of only Imaginary part. Such as i, 40i, 1/2i, etc. While the difference between the imaginary numbers and the complex numbers are that complex number also contains Real numbers, and can be written as a + bi. For example, 30+i, 1/2+1/2i, etc.
56 is a rational whole natural number. Or to put it another way: 56 is a Natural number, but as all natural numbers are also whole numbers 56 is also a whole number, but as all whole numbers are also rational numbers 56 is also a rational number. Natural numbers are a [proper] subset of whole numbers; Whole numbers are a [proper] subset of rational numbers. The set of rational numbers along with the set of irrational numbers make up the set of real numbers
Counting numbers are the numbers we use to count with (one, two, three, five hundred thirty-six, etc.) Whole numbers include the counting numbers but also include the negative integers (numbers like -1, -2, -3, -536, etc.) and zero.
There are no natural numbers which are not also whole numbers.