Prove That 2/√7 Is Irrational
Video Explanation
Watch the video below to understand the complete solution step by step:
Solution
Question: Prove that the number 2/√7 is irrational.
Step 1: Assume the Contrary
Assume that 2/√7 is rational. Then it can be written as a fraction of two integers in lowest terms:
2/√7 = p/q, where p and q are integers with no common factors and q ≠ 0.
Step 2: Isolate √7
Rearrange the equation to isolate √7:
√7 = 2q/p
Now square both sides:
7 = (2q/p)²
7 = 4q²/p²
Multiply both sides by p²:
7p² = 4q²
Step 3: Analyze Divisibility
This equation shows that 7 divides the left side, so 7 must divide 4q². Since 7 is prime and doesn’t divide 4, it must divide q², and therefore q. Let q = 7k for some integer k.
Substitute back:
7p² = 4(7k)²
7p² = 4 × 49k²
7p² = 196k²
p² = 28k²
This shows p² is divisible by 7, so p is divisible by 7.
Step 4: Contradiction
We found both p and q are divisible by 7, which contradicts our assumption that p/q was in lowest terms.
Final Answer
∴ The number 2/√7 cannot be expressed as a ratio of two integers in lowest terms, so 2/√7 is irrational.
Conclusion
By assuming 2/√7 is rational and reaching a contradiction, we conclude that 2/√7 is irrational.