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प्रश्न
Prove that `(sqrt(2) + sqrt(5))` is irrational.
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उत्तर
Given: Let `x = sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)`
To Prove: x is irrational
Proof [Step-wise]:
1. Assume rationality
Assume for the sake of contradiction that `sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)` is a rational number.
By definition, we can set it equal to a rational variable x.
`x = sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)`
2. Isolate a radical
Isolate one of the square root terms by subtracting `sqrt(2)` from both sides of the equation.
`x - sqrt(2) = sqrt(5)`
3. Square both sides
Square both sides of the equation to eliminate the radical on the right side.
`(x - sqrt(2))^2 = (sqrt(5))^2`
Expand the left side using the algebraic identity (a – b)2 = a2 – 2ab + b2.
`x^2 - 2xsqrt(2) + 2 = 5`
4. Isolate the remaining radiacl
Rearrange the equation to isolate the remaining term containing `sqrt(2)`. First, subtract 2 from both sides.
`x^2 - 2xsqrt(2) = 3`
Next, move x2 to the right side.
`-2xsqrt(2) = 3 - x^2`
Multiply the entire equation by –1 to make the radical term positive.
`2xsqrt(2) = x^2 - 3`
Finally, divide both sides by 2x. Note that x ≠ 0 because `sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)` is clearly greater than 0.
`sqrt(2) = (x^2 - 3)/(2x)`
5. Identify the contradiction
Analyze the nature of both sides of the final equation:
Right side `((x^2 - 3)/(2x))`: Since x is assumed to be rational number, its square (x2), subtraction by 3 (x2 – 3) and division by 2x must all result in a rational number.
Left side`(sqrt(2))`: It is a well-established mathematical fact that `sqrt(2)` is an irrational number.
An irrational number cannot equal a rational number. This contradiction means our initial assumption must be false.
Since assuming `sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)` is rational leads to a direct mathematical contradiction, the original number `sqrt(2) + sqrt(5)` must be irrational.
