This week in math we had our first unit test and started our second unit, which is radical operations and equations. In this blog post I am going to focus on how to add or subtract roots.
When adding or subtracting it is like simplifying variables- add like terms. So when you’re simplifying variables you can’t add a with b, it just doesn’t work. And that is the same thing we see here. The numbers in the square roots must all be the same to be able to add them.
I will do 2 examples. Once you see it it will be pretty easy to catch onto.
That is our example question.
Step 1: The first thing I am going to notice is that everything inside all three roots are alike, meaning we can add them together.
Step 2: This is the final step. Just add together all the coefficients and leave the base the same.
We will do a harder questions which take some simplifying to be able to gather like terms.
As you can see in this example I cant see any like terms, so what I am going to try to do is simplify it. How I am going to do that is try to see if any perfect square numbers are a factor of it or divide into it and then just simply making them into a mixed radical.
Step 1: The first thing I am going to do is see if I can break these numbers down into some perfect square numbers. I like to put them on top of the square root it makes it easier to see for me.
Step 2: In this step I am going to write my prime factors down into mixed radicals, exactly like we did last unit and now I can see I have the same base in all of them and can subtract them now.
Step 3: In this final step I am simply just subtracting all the coefficients.
And that is all you need to know. My advice would be to make sure you get your square root numbers right to make sure you do everything else right!