Mr. Fest
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Homework Statement
Prove that \sqrt{6} is irrational.
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
\sqrt{6} = \sqrt{2}*\sqrt{3}
We know that \sqrt{2} is an irrational number (common knowledge) and also this was shown in the textbook.
So, let's assume \sqrt{6} and \sqrt{3} are both rational.
\Rightarrow \sqrt{2}*\sqrt{3} = \frac{a}{b}
Also since, \sqrt{3} is assumed to be rational it can be written as \frac{c}{d} \Rightarrow \sqrt{6} = \sqrt{2}*\frac{c}{d} = \frac{a}{b} \Leftrightarrow \sqrt{2} = \frac{d}{c}*\frac{a}{b} which is a contradiction since a, b, c and d are integers and \sqrt{2} is not a rational number but \frac{d}{c}*\frac{a}{b} would be a rational number. Therefore, we can conclude that \sqrt{6} is an irrational number.
Would this solution be correct? Or rather is this solution enough?
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