No, it is not.
pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.
A rational number is a fraction with an integer in the numerator, and a non-zero integer in the denominator. If you consider pi/2, pi/3, pi/4 (common 'fractions' of pi used in trigonometry) to be 'fractions', then these are not rational numbers.
You can multiply any pair of rational numbers as well as any irrational number and its reciprocal (or a rational multiple of its reciprocal. Thus pi * 3/7*(1/pi) is rational.
No, 3 is a rational number. Pi and the square root of 2 are irrational numbers.
3.1
No, it is not.
pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.pi is a transcendental (a special type of irrational) number whereas 3 is not only rational, but an integer.
No; since pi is irrational if you multiply it by a rational number it is still irrational
A rational number is a fraction with an integer in the numerator, and a non-zero integer in the denominator. If you consider pi/2, pi/3, pi/4 (common 'fractions' of pi used in trigonometry) to be 'fractions', then these are not rational numbers.
You can multiply any pair of rational numbers as well as any irrational number and its reciprocal (or a rational multiple of its reciprocal. Thus pi * 3/7*(1/pi) is rational.
3 times pi is an irrational number because it can't be expressed as a fraction
No, 3 is a rational number. Pi and the square root of 2 are irrational numbers.
You might add (-pi/3), in which case you obtain zero. Or you can choose any other rational number, and subtract that number minus pi/3. For example, if you want the result to be 2, , the number you must add is (2 - pi/3).
Yes, 3.4 is a rational number between 3 and 4: 3.4 is between 3 and 4, and 3.4 = 34/10 = 17/5 which is a rational number. The rational number midway between 3 and 4 is 3.5
Yes if the diameter is rational. But it need not be if the diameter is irrational. If the diameter is 3/pi units, for example, then the circumference will be (3/pi)*pi = 3 units.
Rational -1.(3 repeating) Any repeating decimals are rational. However, a number such as pi (3.141592654...) does not repeat or end.