27 SIMPLIFYING RADICALS A SQUARE ROOT RADICAL is "simplified" when the radicand has no square factors.
Example 1. 33, for example, has no square factors. Its factors are 3· 11, neither of which is a square number. Therefore,
Example 2. 18 has the square factor 9. 18 = 9· 2. Therefore, The square root of a product (We will prove that when we come to rational exponents, Lesson 29.) Therefore,
We have simplified
Example 3. Simplify Solution. 48 = 4· 12. Therefore on extracting But the radicand 12 still has as square factor 4. We must continue: We have now completely simplified Note that we could have achieved the result immediately, if we had realized that 48 = 16· 3. Problem 1. Simplify the following. Inspect each radicand for a square factor: 4, 9, 16, 25, and so on. To see the answer, pass your mouse over the colored area. a) b) c) d)
f) g) h) Problem 2. Reduce to lowest terms.
For a method of finding square factors by means of prime factorization, see Lesson 31 of Arithmetic, Prime numbers. Similar radicals Similar radicals have the same radicand. We add them as like terms. 7 + 2 2 As for 7, it does not "belong" to any radical. Problem 3. Simplify each radical, then add the similar radicals. a)
Problem 4. Simplify the following.
![]() Next Lesson: Multiplying and dividing radicals www.proyectosalonhogar.com |