Prove That 3/2√5 Is Irrational
Video Explanation
Watch the video below to understand the complete solution step by step:
Solution
Question: Prove that the number 3/2√5 is irrational.
Step 1: Assume the Contrary
Assume that 3/2√5 is rational. Then it can be written in the form:
3/2√5 = p/q,
where p and q are integers having no common factors and q ≠ 0.
Step 2: Rearrange the Equation
Multiply both sides by 2√5:
3 = (2√5 × p) / q
Rearranging, we get:
√5 = 3q/2p
Step 3: Square Both Sides
5 = (3q/2p)²
5 = 9q²/4p²
Multiply both sides by 4p²:
20p² = 9q²
Step 4: Analyze Divisibility
From 20p² = 9q², we see that 9 divides the right-hand side, so 9 must divide 20p².
Since 9 and 20 are coprime, 9 must divide p². Hence, p is divisible by 3.
Let p = 3k, where k is an integer.
Substitute p = 3k:
20(3k)² = 9q²
180k² = 9q²
20k² = q²
This shows that q² is divisible by 5, so q is divisible by 5.
Step 5: Contradiction
Thus, p is divisible by 3 and q is divisible by 5, which contradicts the assumption that p and q have no common factor.
Final Answer
∴ The number 3/2√5 cannot be expressed as a ratio of two integers. Hence, 3/2√5 is irrational.
Conclusion
By assuming 3/2√5 to be rational and reaching a contradiction, we conclude that 3/2√5 is irrational.