Advanced properties
The reals are uncountable, that is, there are strictly more real numbers than natural numbers (even though both sets are infinite).
This is proved with Cantor's diagonal argument.
In fact, the cardinality of the reals is 2ω (see cardinal numbers), i.e., the cardinality of the set of subsets of the natural numbers.
Since only a countable set of real numbers can be algebraic, almost all real numbers are transcendental.
The nonexistence of a subset of the reals with cardinality strictly in between that of the integers and the reals is known as the continuum hypothesis.
This can neither be proved nor be disproved, but is independent from the axioms of set theory.
The real numbers form a metric space: the distance between x and y is defined to be the absolute value |x - y|.
By virtue of being a totally ordered set, they also carry an order topology; the topology arising from the metric and the one arising from the order are identical.
The reals are a contractible (hence connected and simply connected), locally compact separable metric space, of dimension 1, and are everywhere dense.
The real numbers are not compact.
There are various properties that uniquely specify them; for instance, all unbounded, continuous, and separable order topologies are necessarily homeomorphic to the reals.
Every nonnegative real number has a square root in R, and no negative number does.
This shows that the order on R is determined by its algebraic structure.
Also, every polynomial of odd degree admits at least one root: these two properties make R the premier example of a real closed field.
Proving this is the first half of one proof of the fundamental theorem of algebra.
The reals carry a canonical measure, the Lebesgue measure, which is the Haar measure on their structure as a topological group normalised such that the unit interval [0,1] has measure 1.
The supremum axiom of the reals refers to subsets of the reals and is therefore a second-order logical statement.
It is not possible to characterize the reals with first-order logic alone: the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem implies that there exists a countable dense subset of the real numbers satisfying exactly the same sentences in first order logic as the real numbers themselves.
The set of hyperreal numbers is much bigger than R but also satisfies the same first order sentences as R.
Ordered fields that satisfy the same first-order sentences as R are called nonstandard models of R.
This is what makes nonstandard analysis work; by proving a first-order statement in some nonstandard model (which may be easier than proving it in R), we know that the same statement must also be true of R.
Generalizations and Extensions
The real numbers can be generalized and extended in several different directions.
Perhaps the most natural extension are the complex numbers which contain solutions to all polynomial equations.
However, the complex numbers are not an ordered field.
Ordered fields extending the reals are the hyperreal numbers and the surreal numbers; both of them contain infinitesimal and infinitely large numbers and thus are not Archimedean. Occasionally, formal elements +∞ and -∞ are added to the reals to form the extended real number line, a compact space which is not a field anymore but retains many of the properties of the real numbers.
Self-adjoint operatorss on a Hilbert space (for example, self-adjoint square complex matrices) generalize the reals in many respects: they can be ordered (though not totally ordered), they are complete, all their eigenvalues are real and they form a real associative algebra. Positive-definite operators correspond to the positive reals and normal operators correspond to the complex numbers.