Asked by Messmer The Impaler
Mia says that anytime there is a radical in an addition expression, it automatically has an irrational number as the sum. Is she correct? (1 point)
• Yes, radicals are irrational.
• Yes, radicals can't be simplified, so they must be irrational.
• No, some radicals simplify to rational numbers.
No radicals always simplify to integers so they are rational
• Yes, radicals are irrational.
• Yes, radicals can't be simplified, so they must be irrational.
• No, some radicals simplify to rational numbers.
No radicals always simplify to integers so they are rational
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Mia is not correct. The correct answer is:
**No, some radicals simplify to rational numbers.**
For example, \(\sqrt{4} + \sqrt{1} = 2 + 1 = 3\), which is a rational number. Not all radicals are irrational; some can simplify to rational numbers.
**No, some radicals simplify to rational numbers.**
For example, \(\sqrt{4} + \sqrt{1} = 2 + 1 = 3\), which is a rational number. Not all radicals are irrational; some can simplify to rational numbers.
There are no human answers yet. A form for humans to post answers is coming very soon!