No.A rational times an irrational is never rational. It is always irrational.
The product of 0 and an irrational is 0 (a rational), the product of a non-zero rational and any irrational is always irrational.
yes, unless you were to simplify (example: 3 times 3/2 = 6/2 = 3)
No, it is always irrational.
It is not always irrational.
No.A rational times an irrational is never rational. It is always irrational.
No. If the rational number is not zero, then such a product is irrational.
The product of 0 and an irrational is 0 (a rational), the product of a non-zero rational and any irrational is always irrational.
yes, unless you were to simplify (example: 3 times 3/2 = 6/2 = 3)
Actually the product of a nonzero rational number and another rational number will always be rational.The product of a nonzero rational number and an IRrational number will always be irrational. (You have to include the "nonzero" caveat because zero times an irrational number is zero, which is rational)
Not always. For example sqrt(2) and 1/sqrt(2) are both irrational, but their product is the rational number 1.
Yes, always.
No, it is always irrational.
It is not always irrational.
Wrong. It is always an irrational number.
Yes, it will always be irrational.
The square of a rational number can be either rational or irrational. However, the square of an irrational number is always irrational.