Oh, dude, the square root of 25 is 5, which is a whole number and can be expressed as a fraction 5/1. So, yes, it is a rational number because it can be written as a ratio of two integers. But hey, who really cares about all that math stuff anyway, right?
No, in fact unless an integer has an integral square root, the square root is always irrational. Note that some rational fractions can have rational square roots, though. Example: sqrt(4/9) = sqrt(4)/sqrt(9) = 2/3, which is rational. Or sqrt(9/16) = 3/4
Yes, of some; the square root of any perfect square is rational - for example, the square root of 4, of 9, of 16, etc.On the other hand, if your "composite number" is not a perfect square, then its square root is irrational.
√99 = Square root of 99 = Irrational. Rational # are able to be expressed as the ratio of 2 integers. i.e. √25 = +5 5 = 5/1 = rational Irrational # can not be expressed as a ratio of 2 integers.
The square root of -121 is imaginary. It has value of i11.It is not rational, irrational, nor real. The coefficient of i, 11, is real and rational, but the result of multiplying i by 11 is imaginary.Now, The Coefficient of (i11) is a complex number, because when dealing with i, the true form is the square root of -1, and so this also means that you still have 2 answers, positive and negative i11, and so the square root of -121 is imaginary, or complex rational number. But, because it is complex, it is not truly rational, all this means is that you end up with aninteger in your complex answer. So, To answer your question, the answer is non of the above, just imaginary. and the value is plus or minus (i11).
The square root of 1 is 1 which is a rational number
Square root of a rational number may either be rational or irrational. For example 1/4 is a rational number whose square root is 1/2. Similarly, 4 is 4/1 which is rational and the square root is 2 which of course is also rational. However, 1/2 and 2 are rational, but their square roots are irrational. We can say the square root of a rational number is always a real number. We can also say the rational numbers whose square roots are also rational are perfect squares or fractions involving perfect squares.
The square root of 1 is 1, so the answer is yes.
It's rational
Yes because any number that can be expressed as a fraction is a rational number and the answer in the question is 1/2 which is rational
Its square root is an irrational number
The square root of 16 is ±4 which is the rational number ±(4/1)
Oh, dude, the square root of 25 is 5, which is a whole number and can be expressed as a fraction 5/1. So, yes, it is a rational number because it can be written as a ratio of two integers. But hey, who really cares about all that math stuff anyway, right?
yes its a rational number because the square root of 4 is 2 and 2 can be put over 1
√0.01 = √(1/100) = √12/√102 = 1/10 (which is a rational number)
No; the square root of any rational number squared is that rational number. Examples: √(2^2) = √4 = 2. √((1/2)^2) = √(1/4) = 1/2
The square root of 9 is a rational number. This is because the square root of 9 is equal to 3, which can be expressed as a fraction, 3/1. In general, a rational number is any number that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers, which is the case for the square root of 9.