The sum, or difference, of two irrational numbers can be rational, or irrational. For example, if A = square root of 2 and B = square root of 3, both the sum and difference are irrational. If A = (1 + square root of 2), and B = square root of 2, then, while both are irrational, the difference (equal to 1) is rational.
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.
the square root of 2 fifths of irrational is 0.565685425
It is known that the square root of an integer is either an integer or irrational. If we square root2 root3 we get 6. The square root of 6 is irrational. Therefore, root2 root3 is irrational.
The square root of 2 times the square root of 2 is rational.
The sum, or difference, of two irrational numbers can be rational, or irrational. For example, if A = square root of 2 and B = square root of 3, both the sum and difference are irrational. If A = (1 + square root of 2), and B = square root of 2, then, while both are irrational, the difference (equal to 1) is rational.
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Yes, for example: square root of 2, and the negative of the square root of 2.
The square root of 2 is an irrational number
Yes because it can't be expressed as a fraction
If the positive square root (for example, square root of 2) is irrational, then the corresponding negative square root (for example, minus square root of 2) is also irrational.
This is impossible to prove, as the square root of 2 is irrational.
Yes, the square root of 2 is an irrational number.
The square root of 2 is 1.141..... is an irrational number
irrational
sqrt(32) = 4sqrt(2) The square root of '2' is irrational, so the square root of '32' is irrational.
irrational