None of them: they are all rational since they can all be represented as terminating decimal numbers.
No. If it was a rational number, then it wouldn't be an irrational number.
Irrational numbers are real numbers.
No. All irrational numbers are real, not all real numbers are irrational.
-- There's an infinite number of rational numbers. -- There's an infinite number of irrational numbers. -- There are more irrational numbers than rational numbers. -- The difference between the number of irrational numbers and the number of rational numbers is infinite.
There are an infinite number of irrational numbers.
It will be irrational. Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction.
The set of real numbers is defined as the union of all rational and irrational numbers. Thus, the irrational numbers are a subset of the real numbers. Therefore, BY DEFINITION, every irrational number is a real number.
Not necessarily. The sum of two irrational numbers can be rational or irrational.
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.
Next to any rational number is an irrational number, but next to an irrational number can be either a rational number or an irrational number, but it is infinitely more likely to be an irrational number (as between any two rational numbers are an infinity of irrational numbers).
The number pi, which is approximately 3.14159265..., is an irrational number.
No, they are complementary sets. No rational number is irrational and no irrational number is rational.Irrational means not rational.