No, because 11 squared is 121 which is a rational number
The square root of 11 is irrational. An irrational number is a number that cannot be expressed as a simple fraction or ratio of two integers. In the case of the square root of 11, it is a non-repeating, non-terminating decimal and cannot be simplified further. Therefore, it falls under the category of irrational numbers.
The square root of 121 is 11 which is not an irrational number.
An irrational number is a number that never ends. An example of an irrational square root would be the square root of 11.
Yes
irrational square root of 121 = 11 square root of 1.21 = 1.1 square root of 12.1 = 3.47...
No, it is 11. Lol.
yes
If you mean 36 minus 25 then the square root of 11 is an irrational number
The square root of negative 11 is an imaginary number, i.e., sqrt(-11) = sqrt(11) i where i is the imaginary unit = sqrt(-1). sqrt(11) is indeed irrational. In fact, the square root of any integer which is not a power of two is irrational.
No because it will be an irrational number
No, because the square root of 11 is an irrational number
Yes. The square root of a fraction is the square root of the numerator over the square root of the denominator. First simplify the fraction (making mixed numbers into improper fractions). Now consider the numerator and denominator separately as whole numbers. Only perfect squares (the squares of whole numbers) have rational square roots. If either, or both, of the numerator and denominator is not a perfect square, the square root of the fraction will be irrational √(11/6) = (√11)/(√6). Neither 11 nor 6 is a perfect square, thus √(11/6) is irrational.