Set of Rational Numbers whose Numerator Divisible by p is Closed under Addition

Theorem
Let $p$ be a prime number.

Let $A_p$ be the set of all rational numbers which, when expressed in canonical form has a numerator which is divisible by $p$.

Then $A_p$ is closed under rational addition.

Proof
Let $a, b \in A_p$.

Then $a = \dfrac {p n_1} {d_1}, b = \dfrac {p n_1} {d_1}$ where:
 * $n_1, n_2 \in \Z$
 * $d_1, d_2 \in \Z_{>0}$
 * $p n_1 \perp d_1, p n_2 \perp d_2$

Then:

From Euclid's Lemma for Prime Divisors, if $p \divides d_1 d_2$ then either $p \divides d_1$ or $p \divides d_2$.

But neither of these is the case, so $p \nmid d_1 d_2$.

Hence by Prime not Divisor implies Coprime:
 * $p \perp d_1 d_2$

where $\perp$ denotes coprimeness.

So when $\dfrac {p \left({n_1 d_2 + n_2 d_1}\right)} {d_1 d_2}$ is expressed in canonical form, $p$ will still be a divisor of the numerator.

Hence the result.