Answer:
3.6+52.3= 55.9
Step-by-step explanation:
Sum/difference:
Let
This means that
Now, assume that is rational. The sum/difference of two rational numbers is still rational (so 5-x is rational), and the division by 3 doesn't change this. So, you have that the square root of 8 equals a rational number, which is false. The mistake must have been supposing that was rational, which proves that the sum/difference of the two given terms was irrational
Multiplication/division:
The logic is actually the same: if we multiply the two terms we get
if again we assume x to be rational, we have
But if x is rational, so is -x/15, and again we come to a contradiction: we have the square root of 8 on one side, which is irrational, and -x/15 on the other, which is rational. So, again, x must have been irrational. You can prove the same claim for the division in a totally similar fashion.
Step-by-step explanation:
I'll help if you'd like
Hey there!
The answer is no because whenever you add or subtract fractions, you find the common denominator(the bottom of the fraction)
Corret way:
The common denominator is 15 (5*3)
Multiply numerator(top) and the denominator by 3
4/5*3*3= 12/15
Multiply numerator and the denominator by 5
1/3*5/5= 5/15
So the equation is now
12/15+5/15= 17/15 or 1 2/15
Hope this helps! :)
Answer:
3/5
Step-by-step explanation:
sin theta=opposite/hypotenuse
4/5=opposite/hypotenuse
therefore opposite=4 and hypotenuse=5
for adjacent
using pythagoras theorem
a^2+b^2=c^2
opposite^2 + adjacent^2 =hypotenuse^2
4^2 + adjacent^2 =5^2
16 + adjacent^2 =25
adjacent^2 =25-16
adjacent =
adjacent=3
cos theta=adjacent/hypotenuse
=3/5
therefore the value of cos theta is 3/5