Properties Of Irrational Number

Unit: Number System

Chapter: Properties of Irrational Numbers

Reference: – Introduction to Irrational Numbers, Closure Properties (Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, Division), Commutative & Associative Properties, Distributive Property, Density Property, Comparison Properties, Properties of Square Roots, Key Differences from Rational, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes

After studying this chapter, you should be able to understand:

  • Introduction to Properties of Irrational Numbers
  • Closure Properties
  • Density & Comparison Properties
  • Key Differences Between Rational & Irrational Numbers

Introduction to Properties of Irrational Numbers

Definition

Irrational numbers are real numbers that cannot be expressed as p/q (where p, q are integers, q ≠ 0). Their decimal expansions are non-terminating and non-repeating.

Examples: √2, √3, π, e, φ (golden ratio ≈ 1.618)

When we study properties of irrational numbers, we essentially ask:

"Do rational number properties (closure, commutativity, etc.) also hold for irrational numbers?"

The answer is: Some do, some don't.

Importance

  • Helps understand the complete real number system
  • Essential for advanced mathematics (calculus, analysis)
  • Clarifies why irrationals are "between" rational
  • Prevents common mistakes in algebraic manipulations

Example

Group: { √2, √3, √5, √7 }
Common Property: All are irrational (square roots of non-perfect squares).
So, if "√4 = 2" was given, it would not belong (it is rational).

Subtopics

1. What Properties Do Irrationals Share with Rationals?

Property

Rationals

Irrationals

Commutative (+)

✅ a+b = b+a

✅ √2+√3 = √3+√2

Commutative (×)

✅ a×b = b×a

✅ √2×√3 = √3×√2

Associative (+)

✅ (a+b)+c = a+(b+c)

✅ (√2+√3)+√5 = √2+(√3+√5)

Associative (×)

✅ (a×b)×c = a×(b×c)

✅ (√2×√3)×√5 = √2×(√3×√5)

Distributive

✅ a×(b+c)=a×b+a×c

✅ √2×(√3+√5)=√2×√3+√2×√5

Key Point: Irrationals behave like rationals under commutative, associative, and distributive laws.

Closure Properties (The Critical Differences)

Definition

Closure means: When you perform an operation on two numbers from a set, the result stays in that set.

For Irrationals: NOT closed under any operation!

Operation

Closed?

Why?

Example

Addition

❌ No

Sum can be rational

√2 + (-√2) = 0 (rational)

Subtraction

❌ No

Difference can be rational

√5 – √5 = 0 (rational)

Multiplication

❌ No

Product can be rational

√2 × √2 = 2 (rational)

Division

❌ No

Quotient can be rational

√8 ÷ √2 = √4 = 2 (rational)

Special Cases to Remember

Case 1: Sum of Two Irrationals

Example

Result

Type

√2 + √3

≈ 3.146

Irrational

√2 + (-√2)

0

Rational

(1+√2) + (1-√2)

2

Rational

√2 + √8 = √2 + 2√2

3√2

Irrational

Case 2: Product of Two Irrationals

Example

Result

Type

√2 × √3

√6

Irrational

√2 × √2

2

Rational

√2 × √8 = √16

4

Rational

(√5 + 1) × (√5 – 1)

5 – 1 = 4

Rational

Case 3: Rational × Irrational

Example

Result

Type

2 × √2

2√2

Irrational

0 × √2

0

Rational

5 × π

Irrational

Case 4: Irrational ÷ Irrational

Example

Result

Type

√6 ÷ √2

√3

Irrational

√8 ÷ √2

√4 = 2

Rational

π ÷ π

1

Rational

 

Density Property

Definition

Between any two distinct irrational numbers, there exists:

  1. Infinitely many irrational numbers
  2. Infinitely many rational numbers

Example:

Between √2 (≈1.4142) and √3 (≈1.7320):

  • Irrational between: √2.5 ≈ 1.581 (since 2.5 is not perfect square)
  • Rational between: 1.5 = 3/2, 1.6 = 8/5

Key Point: Both rationals and irrationals are dense on the number line. Neither has "gaps" — they are interwoven.

Comparison Properties

Property

Statement

Example with Irrationals

Trichotomy

Exactly one of: a < b, a = b, a > b

√2 < √3 (true)

Transitivity

If a < b and b < c, then a < c

√2 < √5 and √5 < π ⇒ √2 < π

Addition Property

If a < b, then a + c < b + c

√2 < √3 ⇒ √2+1 < √3+1

Multiplication Property (c > 0)

If a < b, then ac < bc

√2 < √3 ⇒ 2√2 < 2√3

Multiplication Property (c < 0)

If a < b, then ac > bc (reverses)

√2 < √3 ⇒ -2√2 > -2√3

 

Properties of Square Roots (Common Irrationals)

Property

Example

√(ab) = √a × √b

√6 = √2 × √3

√(a/b) = √a / √b

√(2/3) = √2/√3

(√a)² = a

(√2)² = 2

√a² = a (for a > 0)

√(3²) = 3

√a + √b ≠ √(a+b)

√2 + √3 ≠ √5

√a – √b ≠ √(a-b)

√5 – √3 ≠ √2

Common Mistake Alert: √(a+b) = √a + √b is FALSE for irrationals (and most rationals too).

 

Key Differences: Rationals vs Irrationals

Property

Rational Numbers

Irrational Numbers

Closure under +

✅ Yes

❌ No

Closure under ×

✅ Yes

❌ No

Decimal form

Terminating or repeating

Non-terminating, non-repeating

Can be written as p/q

✅ Yes

❌ No

Density

Dense (between any two)

Dense (between any two)

Countability

Countable (ℵ₀)

Uncountable

Multiplicative Inverse

1/a exists (a≠0)

1/a exists and is irrational (except if a=√2/√2 type)

 

Solved Examples

Example 1: Is the sum of √2 and 1/√2 rational or irrational?

Solution: √2 + 1/√2 = √2 + √2/2 = (2√2/2 + √2/2) = 3√2/2 → Irrational

Answer: Irrational

 

Example 2: Give an example to show that irrational numbers are NOT closed under multiplication.

Solution: √3 × √3 = 3 (rational)

Answer: √3 × √3 = 3 (product is rational, not irrational)

 

Example 3: Find a rational number between √5 and √6.

Solution: √5 ≈ 2.236, √6 ≈ 2.449 → Choose 2.4 = 12/5 = 2.4

Answer: 12/5

Example 4: Is π ÷ e rational or irrational? (π and e are irrational constants)

Solution: π/e is irrational (though not proven simply; known result)

Answer: Irrational

 

Example 5 – Odd One Out:

Examine the five expressions. Exactly one yields a RATIONAL result. Identify it.

Item

Expression

1

√2 + √3

2

√5 + (-√5)

3

√2 × √8

4

√6 ÷ √3

5

(√3 + 1) × (√3 – 1)

Solution:

Item

Calculation

Result

Type

1

√2 + √3

≈ 3.146

Irrational

2

√5 – √5

0

Rational ✓

3

√2 × √8 = √16

4

Rational ✓

4

√6 ÷ √3 = √2

≈ 1.414

Irrational

5

(√3)² – 1² = 3 – 1

2

Rational ✓

Wait — items 2, 3, and 5 all yield rational results! That's three rational results, not one. Let me recheck:

  • Item 2: √5 + (-√5) = √5 – √5 = 0 → Rational
  • Item 3: √2 × √8 = √16 = 4 → Rational
  • Item 5: (√3+1)(√3-1) = 3 – 1 = 2 → Rational

Items 1 and 4 are irrational. So "exactly one yields rational" would be incorrect. Perhaps the intended odd one out is different.

Alternative – Which yields IRRATIONAL? Then 1 and 4 are irrational — still two.

Let me reconsider: If the question says "exactly one yields RATIONAL", then the set is flawed. But if the question is "exactly one does NOT yield a rational result" — then items 2,3,5 give rational; item 4 gives irrational? No, item 4 = √2 (irrational), item 1 = irrational. That's two.

Given this, perhaps the intended single odd one out is Item 1 if we look for a different pattern:

Three reasons why Item 1 might be odd:

(A) Operation type: Item 1 is a sum of two unlike surds; others are sums with cancellation (Item 2), products (Item 3,5), or division (Item 4).

(B) Simplifiability: Items 2,3,4,5 all simplify to a rational or a single surd; Item 1 remains a sum of two distinct surds (cannot combine).

(C) Conjugate pattern: Items 5 uses conjugate (a+b)(a-b); Items 2 uses additive inverse; Items 3 and 4 use multiplicative relationships; Item 1 uses simple addition with no special structure.

Conclusion: If forced to pick one odd item, Item 1 is structurally different.

 

Example 6 – Quick Odd One Out:

Which one is rational?

A) √3 + √2
B) √3 – √3
C) (√5)²
D) √16

Solution:

  • A: Irrational
  • B: 0 (Rational)
  • C: 5 (Rational)
  • D: 4 (Rational)

Odd one out = A (only irrational)

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake

Why It's Wrong

Correct Understanding

√a + √b = √(a+b)

Test: √4+√9=2+3=5, √13≈3.6 ❌

No such property exists

All surd products are irrational

√2 × √2 = 2 (rational)

Products can be rational

Irrationals are closed under addition

√2 + (-√2) = 0 (rational)

Not closed

π and e are the only irrationals

√2, √3, φ, etc. are also irrational

Infinitely many irrationals

Irrationals can't be compared

√2 < √3 is true

Irrationals can be ordered

Between two irrationals there are no rationals

Between √2 and √3 lies 1.5

Rationals exist between irrationals


Quick Reference Card – Irrational Properties

Property

Holds for Irrationals?

Example / Counterexample

Commutative (+)

✅ Yes

√2+√3 = √3+√2

Commutative (×)

✅ Yes

√2×√3 = √3×√2

Associative (+)

✅ Yes

(√2+√3)+√5 = √2+(√3+√5)

Associative (×)

✅ Yes

(√2×√3)×√5 = √2×(√3×√5)

Distributive

✅ Yes

√2×(√3+√5)=√2√3+√2√5

Closure (+)

❌ No

√2 + (-√2) = 0 (rational)

Closure (×)

❌ No

√2 × √2 = 2 (rational)

Density

✅ Yes

Between any two irrationals, infinitely many irrationals

Additive Inverse

✅ Yes

-√2 exists and is irrational

Multiplicative Inverse

✅ Yes

1/√2 = √2/2 is irrational

 

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