Math: simplifying decimal radicals
Tutoring high school math, you see this a few times each semester. The tutor shows an example.
Suppose you get asked a question like the following:
Example: Simplify √(0.225)
Unless you have one of those new-style calculators, perhaps the WriteView or the natural display, you might likely receive just a decimal.
If you need exact form, here’s how to do it by hand:
1. Rewrite the question in fraction form:
√(0.225) = √(225/1000)
2. Reduce the fraction inside:
√(225/1000) = √(9/40)
3. Write the radical separately top and bottom (which doesn’t change the value, but can make the problem simpler to consider)
√(9/40) = √(9)/√(40)
4. Take the square root of top and bottom separately, or else simplify:
√(9)/√(40) = 3/(√(4)√(10) )= 3/(2√(10))
5. Rationalize the denominator; in this case, multiply top and bottom by √(10) to remove the radical from the denominator.
(3√(10))/(2√(10)√(10))
Since √(10) times √(10) = 10, the expression becomes
(3√(10))/20
Jack of Oracle Tutoring by Jack and Diane, Campbell River, BC.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.