Multiply it by 0. The result is 0, which is rational.
That is the only way that will work with all Irrational Numbers.
No irrational number can turn into a rational number by itself: you have to do something to it. If you multiply any irrational number by 0, the answer is 0, which is rational. So, given the correct procedure, every irrational number can be turned into a rational number.
Sqrt(2) is irrational. Multiply by sqrt(4.5). Result is 3 which is rational.
The square roots of 50 are irrational numbers. You cannot turn irrational numbers into fractions, which are rational numbers.
Yes it can be because a rational number is a number that can be written as a ratio with a fraction with denominator on top and numerator on bottom. You can turn the ratio into decimal or any ways you can and you can find it on a number line...
yes mhm, because obviously if it is a number...than it's a whole number * * * * * The above is a bit back to front. A whole number is a rational number which, in turn, is a real number.
No irrational number can turn into a rational number by itself: you have to do something to it. If you multiply any irrational number by 0, the answer is 0, which is rational. So, given the correct procedure, every irrational number can be turned into a rational number.
Sqrt(2) is irrational. Multiply by sqrt(4.5). Result is 3 which is rational.
Some irrational numbers can be multiplied by another irrational number to yield a rational number - for example the square root of 2 is irrational but if you multiply it by itself, you get 2 - which is rational. Irrational roots of numbers can yield rational numbers if they are raised to the appropriate power
Other than multiplication by 0 or by its own reciprocal, it if often not possible. Try it with pi, if you think otherwise.
In most cases you cannot since the square root is an irrational number, unlike a fraction which is rational.
The set of irrational numbers is larger than the set of rational numbers, as proved by Cantor: The set of rational numbers is "countable", meaning there is a one-to-one correspondence between the natural numbers and the rational numbers. You can put them in a sequence, in such a way that every rational number will eventually appear in the sequence. The set of irrational numbers is uncountable, this means that no such sequence is possible. All rational and irrationals (ie real numbers) are a subset of complex numbers. Complex numbers, in turn, are part of a larger group, and so on.
The square roots of 50 are irrational numbers. You cannot turn irrational numbers into fractions, which are rational numbers.
An irrational number must not have a repeating sequence. If we have a number, such as 0.333333...., we can turn this into a rational number as such.Let x = 0.333333......, then multiply both sides by 10:10x = 3.333333......Now subtract the first equation from the second, since the 3's go on forever, they will cancel each other out and you're left with:9x = 3. Now divide both sides by 9: x = 3/9 which is 1/3, a rational number equal to 0.3333333....If a number can be expressed as the ratio a/b, where a and b are integers (with the restriction that b not equal zero), then the number is rational. If you cannot express the number as such, then it is irrational.
6.22 is a rational number. If you mean to turn it into a fraction of a/b then: 6.22 = 622/100 = 311/50 = 6 11/50
7/16 is a number - expressed as a fraction or a rational number.7/16 is a number - expressed as a fraction or a rational number.7/16 is a number - expressed as a fraction or a rational number.7/16 is a number - expressed as a fraction or a rational number.
Yes it can be because a rational number is a number that can be written as a ratio with a fraction with denominator on top and numerator on bottom. You can turn the ratio into decimal or any ways you can and you can find it on a number line...
You cannot. The cosine of 30 degrees is an irrational number.