Math, asked by Miral23, 3 months ago

Prove that√3-√2 is irrational​

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Answered by yash3rdacccount
1

Answer:

Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:Answer:

To prove: 2 + 3 3 is irrational, let us assume that 2 + 3 3 is rational. 2 + 3 3 = a b ; b ≠ 0 and a and b are integers. Since a and b are integers so, a - 2 b will also be an integer. ... Thus, 2 + 3 3 is irrational.

Step-by-step explanation:

Step-by-step explanation:

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