No. The sum of an irrational number and any other [real] number is irrational.
A negative irrational number can be thought of as an irrational number multiplied by -1, or an irrational number with a minus sign in front of it.
If an irrational number is added to, (or multiplied by) a rational number, the result will always be an irrational number.
That simply isn't true. The sum of two irrational numbers CAN BE rational, but it can also be irrational. As an example, the square root of 2 plus the square root of 2 is irrational.
Any irrational number will, eg √2, π, e.
97 is a rational number.
The square root of 97 is an irrational number. This is because the square root of 97 cannot be expressed as a fraction of two integers. In other words, the decimal representation of the square root of 97 goes on forever without repeating, making it an irrational number.
0.808333333... Its an irrational number
9.7 is a rational number that can also be expressed as a fraction in the form of 97/10 whereas irrational numbers can't be expressed as fractions.
Yes, they are.
An irrational number.
No. The sum of an irrational number and any other [real] number is irrational.
The sum of a rational and irrational number must be an irrational number.
No, 3.56 is not an irrational number. 3.56 is rational.
rational * irrational = irrational.
-Pi is irrational, because it does not terminate or repeat. Whenever you multiply an irrational number by a rational number (-1), the result is an irrational number.
A negative irrational number can be thought of as an irrational number multiplied by -1, or an irrational number with a minus sign in front of it.