Math, asked by duyangtali9, 1 month ago

prove that root 5 is irrational ​

Answers

Answered by MrMaknae
0

Step-by-step explanation:

Given: Number 5.

To Prove: Root 5 is irrational.

Proof: Let us assume that square root 5 is rational. Thus we can write, √5 = p/q, where p, q are the integers, and q is not equal to 0. The integers p and q are coprime numbers thus, HCF (p,q) = 1.

Answered by DreamyDiva21
1

Let us assume that √5 is a rational number.

So it can be expressed in the form p/q where p,q are co-prime integers and q≠0

⇒ √5 = p/q

On squaring both the sides we get,

⇒5 = p²/q²

⇒5q² = p² —————–(i)

p²/5 = q²

So 5 divides p

p is a multiple of 5

⇒ p = 5m

⇒ p² = 25m² ————-(ii)

From equations (i) and (ii), we get,

5q² = 25m²

⇒ q² = 5m²

⇒ q² is a multiple of 5

⇒ q is a multiple of 5

Hence, p,q have a common factor 5. This contradicts our assumption that they are co-primes. Therefore, p/q is not a rational number

√5 is an irrational number.

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