No Irrational Numbers don't have patterns and cant be expressed as a ratio so you cant even subtract the number.
Ex: 22/7 - sqrt(2), you wont be able to find the difference since you cant even put it in a complete number.
There is no number which can be rational and irrational so there is no point in asking "how".
It could be either.
yes * * * * * No. Rational and irrational numbers are two DISJOINT subsets of the real numbers. That is, no rational number is irrational and no irrational is rational.
The sum or the difference between two irrational numbers could either be rational or irrational, however, it should be a real number.
The difference can be rational or irrational.5 + sqrt(3) and 2 + sqrt(3) are both irrational numbers but their difference is[5 + sqrt(3)] - [2 + sqrt(3)] = 3, which is rational.
Since the sum of two rational numbers is rational, the answer will be the same as for the sum of an irrational and a single rational number. It is always irrational.
In between any two rational numbers there is an irrational number. In between any two irrational numbers there is a rational number.
In between any two rational numbers there is an irrational number. In between any two Irrational Numbers there is a rational number.
The sum, or difference, of two irrational numbers can be rational, or irrational. For example, if A = square root of 2 and B = square root of 3, both the sum and difference are irrational. If A = (1 + square root of 2), and B = square root of 2, then, while both are irrational, the difference (equal to 1) is rational.
No. Real numbers are divided into two DISJOINT (non-overlapping) sets: rational numbers and irrational numbers. A rational number cannot be irrational, and an irrational number cannot be rational.
Not necessarily. The sum of two irrational numbers can be rational or irrational.
Can be rational or irrational.