When I come across ratios that have square roots such as below,
(1+√5)/ (2+√7)
would it be ok for me to unsquare all sides to get an integer on all sides?
=(1+√5)^2/ (2+√7)^2
=1+5 / 2+7
=6 /7
When I come across ratios that have square roots such as below,
(1+√5)/ (2+√7)
would it be ok for me to unsquare all sides to get an integer on all sides?
=(1+√5)^2/ (2+√7)^2
=1+5 / 2+7
=6 /7
Then is there no way to elegantly remove square roots from binomials such as the example below?
2x+√3 = x- √5
Must I always factor out or is there another way to simplify? Thanks.
Hi, I'd like to add another question to this last post by kimd6746:
If I saw this on the test, I would probably keep it safe and square both sides, but can I subtract the Xs to get the below?
x+ radical 3 = - radical 5?
Is leaving the - radical 5 problematic / not correct? Would this be considered undefined or out of bounds for the GMAT?