vovka Posted December 15, 2017 Posted December 15, 2017 Hello guys! I've faced a minor difficulty in proving the statement "√3 is irrational number". My arguments are the following: Let's suppose that √3 is rational then it can be expressed as p/q, p,q∊Z which is irreducible, so √3=p/q <=> 3=p2/q2 <=> p2=3q2 And here is a problem from p2=3q2 I concluded that p=3a, a∊Z after that the proof is led to contradiction => p/q can be reduced by 3. The ground for my doubt is we cannot conclude from product's divisibility the divisibility of it's factors (maybe even these factors are the same) e.g. 12 | 3*8 but 12 ∤ 3 and 12 ∤ 8. I apologize for my English)) and appreciate any attention.
mathematic Posted December 15, 2017 Posted December 15, 2017 (edited) p=3a leads to [latex]9a^2=3q^2\ or\ 3a^2=q^2[/latex], leading to in infinite chain, which cannot be. Edited December 15, 2017 by mathematic latex form
druS Posted December 16, 2017 Posted December 16, 2017 Not an expert, but I thought any root of a prime number is pretty much a definition of an irrational number.
uncool Posted December 16, 2017 Posted December 16, 2017 28 minutes ago, druS said: Not an expert, but I thought any root of a prime number is pretty much a definition of an irrational number. Not the definition, no. It does need to be proven that given a prime p, then for any nonzero integers a, b that a^2/b^2 is not p.
druS Posted December 16, 2017 Posted December 16, 2017 5 hours ago, uncool said: Not the definition, no. It does need to be proven that given a prime p, then for any nonzero integers a, b that a^2/b^2 is not p. I said I wasn't an expert. I also did not say it was "the definition" but "pretty much a definition". This might not be math, but it is English. I guess that verbal qualifiers can be tricky things. Out of interest, can you name a root of a prime that is rational? Genuine interest if the answer is yes.
vovka Posted December 16, 2017 Author Posted December 16, 2017 (edited) 13 hours ago, mathematic said: p=3a leads to 9a2=3q2 or 3a2=q2 , leading to in infinite chain, which cannot be. The point here is 9a^2=3q^2 leads to 3a^2=q^2 so q=3b, b ∈Z thus p/q=3a/3b which contradicts with our assumption that p/q is irreducible. Edited December 16, 2017 by vovka
uncool Posted December 16, 2017 Posted December 16, 2017 6 hours ago, druS said: I said I wasn't an expert. I also did not say it was "the definition" but "pretty much a definition". This might not be math, but it is English. I guess that verbal qualifiers can be tricky things. Out of interest, can you name a root of a prime that is rational? Genuine interest if the answer is yes. If a positive integer n is not a square, then its square root is irrational. This includes all primes. My point was that it isn't as simple as looking at the definition - it does take some facts about the integers in the first place, as vovka implicitly points out.
Country Boy Posted December 20, 2017 Posted December 20, 2017 druS said "Out of interest, can you name a root of a prime that is rational? Genuine interest if the answer is yes". No, the roots of every prime number are all irrational. But that is not exactly what you said before. You said, before, "I thought any root of a prime number is pretty much a definition of an irrational number". Now, I don't know what "pretty much" is intended to mean here but while it is true that "the root of every prime number is irrational", the converse "every irrational is the root of a prime number" is false. $\pi$ and e are irrationals that are not roots of a prime number. You might be interested in this: Any number, rational or irrational, that satisfies an "n"th degree polynomial equation is "algebraic of degree n" (the rationals are all "algebraic of degree 1"). Numbers such as $\pi$ or e are NOT "algebraic" of any degree. They are "transcendental" numbers.
druS Posted December 26, 2017 Posted December 26, 2017 On 12/17/2017 at 3:47 AM, uncool said: If a positive integer n is not a square, then its square root is irrational. This includes all primes. My point was that it isn't as simple as looking at the definition - it does take some facts about the integers in the first place, as vovka implicitly points out. HallsofIvy Sorry mate, I hadn't checked in as I simply thought it was a case of a specialist dumping on a basic novice. SO have to say I was very wrong in that assessment and thank you for your response. FWIW I wasn't suggesting that all irrational numbers are prime square root, pie being an obvious example. In fact I would of thought that there are many, many irrational numbers, more than rational I guess.Yes I AM interested in the relationship of polynomials to transcendental numbers. But education must prevail for a while before it means much more to me than an abstract observation. I'll get there. With persistence. By the way, maybe someone here can answer a question I asked of a maths lecturer earlier this year but without clear response. Is plank's number irrational? I get that "plank-bar" would be due to the involvement of pie, but what about planks number itself? (apologies to Vovka for the hijack.)
uncool Posted December 30, 2017 Posted December 30, 2017 Planck's "number" isn't really a number. It has units; your question is analogous to asking "Is 1 meter rational?"
druS Posted December 31, 2017 Posted December 31, 2017 21 hours ago, uncool said: Planck's "number" isn't really a number. It has units; your question is analogous to asking "Is 1 meter rational?" Haha! I did realise that Planks constant was a unit, but I also thought that it was a an actual number. So, not the case. Cheers
Juliana Sanabri Posted January 7, 2018 Posted January 7, 2018 It is the part of the definition of the rational numbers that all the surds are the irrational numbers and √3 is a surd. That's why it is an irrational number. If you want to get further details about the rational and irrational numbers, then you can take a review of this post..... link removed
John Cuthber Posted January 7, 2018 Posted January 7, 2018 1 hour ago, Juliana Sanabri said: It is the part of the definition of the rational numbers that all the surds are the irrational numbers and √3 is a surd. No it isn't. The definition of irrational numbers is that they can't be written as a ratio of two integers. The fact that surds are irrational is a consequence of that definition, but not part of it.
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