Show That 7√5 Is Irrational
Video Explanation
Watch the video below to understand the complete solution step by step:
Solution
Question: Show that the number 7√5 is irrational.
Step 1: Assume the Contrary
Assume that 7√5 is rational. Then it can be written as a fraction of two integers in lowest terms:
7√5 = p/q, where p and q are integers with no common factors and q ≠ 0.
Step 2: Isolate √5
Rearrange the equation to isolate √5:
√5 = p / (7q)
Now square both sides:
5 = p² / (49q²)
Multiply both sides by 49q²:
5 × 49q² = p²
245q² = p²
Step 3: Analyze Parity and Divisibility
This shows that p² is divisible by 5 (because the left side has factor 5), so p must be divisible by 5.
Let p = 5k for some integer k:
(5k)² = 245q²
25k² = 245q²
k² = 49q²
This shows that k² is divisible by 7², so k is divisible by 7.
Step 4: Contradiction
We found both p has factor 5 and k has factor 7, so p has factors 5 and 7. That means p and q share common factor (since p contains 7 and q remains). This contradicts our assumption that p/q was in lowest terms.
Final Answer
∴ The number 7√5 cannot be written as a ratio of two integers in lowest terms, so 7√5 is irrational.
Conclusion
By assuming 7√5 is rational and reaching a contradiction, we conclude that 7√5 is irrational.