Will every n

Isabela Sherman

Isabela Sherman

Answered question

2022-05-20

Will every n t h root of 2 be an irrational number? If yes, how can I prove that?

Answer & Explanation

stormsteghj

stormsteghj

Beginner2022-05-21Added 11 answers

Yes. In fact, for every integer k and every n > 1, the n root of k is either an integer or irrational.

One way to prove it is to use exactly the same idea as for proving the square root of 2 is irrational: suppose k n = p q , with p and q integers, relatively prime. Then q n k = p n . Now think about the prime factorizations: every prime that divides q must divide p, but p and q are relatively prime, so q = 1. That means that you must have k = p n with p an integer. That is, the only way for the n root of k to be a rational is if k is an nth power of an integer.

Or you can use the Rational Root Test: an n root of k is a root of the polynomial x n k. But a rational root of a polynomial with integer coefficients that is written in lowest term p q must have denominator q that divides the leading coefficient and numerator q that divides the constant coefficient. So any rational root of x n k must be an integer.

Getting this back to your question, since 2 is not an n power of an integer for any n > 1, 2 n is not a rational for any integer n > 1.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?