this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2024
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I don't think so. Using the theorem, (an)² + (bn)² = c² ... Algebra... c = n(root(a² + b²))
If c is a whole number, then the root must give a whole number, and therefore n divides c
Hypothetically I can see it working from the algebra. We can construct some trivial cases like taking 3:4:5 and dividing all those lengths by root(2). All lengths are now irrational and could be made whole by multiplying them all by root(2). We can also do it with different roots in a way that is hard to type on mobile but essentially involves breaking up, say, root(30) into component roots and having different pairs of components between the top and bottom of the fraction line but that is essentially the same thing as dividing them all by the same root. I can't see a general way of doing it if they are not all irrational in the same way, though I am just a maths teacher not a proper researcher.
If only some side lengths are irrational, then, by definition, there is no ratio of whole numbers that describes those lengths relative to each other - therefore, you can't divide them out to be whole. Unless all side lengths are irrational and also share the same irrational multiplier (like root(2) in your example).
Yeah I think I was overcomplicating it in my head, I kept getting caught in the hows and whys of squaring everything in Pythagoras' theorem, that maybe it could get around the problems of some being irrational and some not.
Ultimately I think you're right that the scaling itself is the problem: scaling irrational numbers to be whole numbers generally won't work outside of those specific cases.
Also, not all irrational numbers can even be squared into rationals