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How do you simpilfy radicals? - Answers

Two general rules are:1. Not to have a perfect square as a factor within a square root (or perfect cube for cubic roots, etc.) Split it off. Example: root(12) = root(4) x root(3) = 2 x root(3)2. Often, people try to avoid square roots in the denominator. Example: 1 / root(2). Multiply top and bottom by root(2), to get: root(2) / 2.



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How do you simpilfy radicals? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_simpilfy_radicals

Two general rules are:1. Not to have a perfect square as a factor within a square root (or perfect cube for cubic roots, etc.) Split it off. Example: root(12) = root(4) x root(3) = 2 x root(3)2. Often, people try to avoid square roots in the denominator. Example: 1 / root(2). Multiply top and bottom by root(2), to get: root(2) / 2.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_simpilfy_radicals

How do you simpilfy radicals? - Answers

Two general rules are:1. Not to have a perfect square as a factor within a square root (or perfect cube for cubic roots, etc.) Split it off. Example: root(12) = root(4) x root(3) = 2 x root(3)2. Often, people try to avoid square roots in the denominator. Example: 1 / root(2). Multiply top and bottom by root(2), to get: root(2) / 2.

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      Two general rules are:1. Not to have a perfect square as a factor within a square root (or perfect cube for cubic roots, etc.) Split it off. Example: root(12) = root(4) x root(3) = 2 x root(3)2. Often, people try to avoid square roots in the denominator. Example: 1 / root(2). Multiply top and bottom by root(2), to get: root(2) / 2.
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