the laws of surds. what is a surd = 6 = 12 the above roots have exact values and are called rational...

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The Laws Of Surds

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Page 1: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

The Laws Of Surds

Page 2: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

2

36 = 6

= 12

144

1.41 2.763 21

The above roots have exact values

and are called rational

These roots do NOT have exact values

and are called irrational OR Surds

Page 3: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Adding and subtracting a surd such as 2. It can

be treated in the same way as an “x” variable in algebra. The following examples will illustrate this point.

4 2 + 6 2

=10 2

16 23 - 7 23

=9 23

10 3 + 7 3 - 4 3 =13 3

Page 4: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

4 6 24

a b ab

4 10 40

List the first 10 square numbers

Examples

1, 2, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100

Page 5: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Some square roots can be broken down into a mixture of integer values and surds. The following examples will illustrate this idea:

12

To simplify 12 we must split 12 into factors with at least one being a square number.

= 4 x 3

Now simplify the square root.

= 2 3

Page 6: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

45 = 9 x 5= 35

32= 16 x 2= 42

72= 4 x 18

= 2 x 9 x 2= 2 x 3 x 2

= 62

Have a go !Think square numbers

Page 7: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Simplify the following square roots:

(1) 20 (2) 27 (3) 48

(4) 75 (5) 4500 (6) 3200

= 25

= 33

= 43

= 53

= 305 = 402

Page 8: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Simplify :

1. 20 = 2√5

= 3√2

= ¼

2. 18

1 13.

2 2

1 14.

4 4 =

¼

Page 9: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

4 4 4

a a a

13 13 13

Examples

Page 10: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

You may recall from your fraction work that the top line of a fraction is the numerator and the bottom line the denominator.

2 numerator =

3 denominatorFractions can contain surds:

23

5

4 7

3 2

3 - 5

Page 11: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

a a a

If by using certain maths techniques we remove the surd from either the top or bottom of the fraction then we say we are “rationalising the numerator” or “rationalising the denominator”.

Remember the rule

This will help us to rationalise a surd fraction

Page 12: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

To rationalise the denominator multiply the top and bottom of the fraction by the square root you are

trying to remove:

3

53 5

=5 5

( 5 x 5 = 25 = 5 )

3 5=

5

Rationalising Surds

Page 13: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Let’s try this one :

Remember multiply top and bottom by root you are trying to remove

3

2 73 7

=2 7 7

3 7=

2 73 7

=14

Rationalising Surds

Page 14: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

10

7 510 5

=7 5 5

10 5=

7 52 5

=7

Rationalising Surds

Rationalise the denominator

Page 15: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Rationalise the denominator of the following :

7

34

6

14

3 10

4

9 22 5

7 36 3

11 2

7 3=

32 6

=3

7 10=

15

2 29

2 15

=21

3 6=

11

Page 16: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

3. 12 + 3 12 - 3

Multiply out :

1. 3 3 = 3

= 14

2. 14 14

= 12- 9 = 3

Conjugate Pairs.

Page 17: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Conjugate Pairs.

Rationalising Surds

Look at the expression : ( 5 2)( 5 2) This is a conjugate pair. The brackets are identical

apart from the sign in each bracket .

Multiplying out the brackets we get :

( 5 2)( 5 2) = 5 5 - 2 5 + 2 5 - 4

= 5 - 4

= 1When the brackets are multiplied out the surds ALWAYS cancel out and we end up seeing that the expression is rational ( no root sign )

Page 18: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

7 3 7 3

a b a b a b

11 5 11 5

Examples

Conjugate Pairs.

= 7 – 3 = 4

= 11 – 5 = 6

Page 19: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Rationalise the denominator in the expressions below by multiplying top and bottom by the

appropriate conjugate:

2

5 - 12( 5 + 1)

=( 5 - 1)( 5 + 1)

2( 5 + 1)=

( 5 5 - 5 + 5 - 1)2( 5 + 1)

=(5 - 1)

( 5 + 1)=

2

Conjugate Pairs.

Rationalising Surds

Page 20: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Rationalise the denominator in the expressions below by multiplying top and bottom by the

appropriate conjugate:

7

( 3 - 2)7( 3 + 2)

=( 3 - 2)( 3 + 2)

7( 3 + 2)=

(3 - 2)=7( 3 + 2)

Conjugate Pairs.

Rationalising Surds

Page 21: The Laws Of Surds. What is a Surd = 6 = 12 The above roots have exact values and are called rational These roots do NOT have exact values and are called

Rationalise the denominator in the expressions below :

5

( 7-2)3

( 3 - 2)

Rationalise the numerator in the expressions below :

6 + 412

5 + 117

= 3 + 6

- 5=6( 6 - 4)

- 6=7( 5 - 11)

5( 7 + 2)=

3