No.
53/10
No, 5.3 is not an irrational number; it is a rational number. Rational numbers can be expressed as a fraction of two integers, and 5.3 can be written as 53/10. Therefore, since it can be represented as a fraction, it is classified as rational.
Yes. Also, the square root of 5.3 is an irrational number. And the square root of negative 5.3 is an imaginary number. :D Hope that helps a bit.
No, it is rational.
No.
53/10
No, because 53 is a rational number that can be expressed as a fraction in the form of 53/1
Irrational
Square root of 53 is simlipfied in decimal form as √53 = 7.280. Square root of 53 cannot be expressed as a fraction in the form p/q which tells us that the square root of 53 is an irrational number.
No, 5.3 is not an irrational number; it is a rational number. Rational numbers can be expressed as a fraction of two integers, and 5.3 can be written as 53/10. Therefore, since it can be represented as a fraction, it is classified as rational.
Yes. Also, the square root of 5.3 is an irrational number. And the square root of negative 5.3 is an imaginary number. :D Hope that helps a bit.
It belongs to any set that contains it! For example, {-1.576}, or {45, sqrt(2), pi, -3/7, -1.576}, or numbers between -43 and 53, or rational numbers, or real numbers, or negative rational numbers, etc One set in particular that includes -1.576 is the set of rational numbers (ℚ).
0.53 is a fraction. It is a fraction in decimal form rather than in the form of a ratio. However, that does not stop it being a fraction. And, since it is a decimal fraction, there is not another simpler decimal form. Its equivalent, in rational form, is 53/100 which cannot be further simplified.
Rational
1.14 is rational.
4.6 is rational.