Simplifying square root of an irrational

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erisedk
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Homework Statement


Find [(3 - 51/2)/2]1/2

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


My calculator says (-1 + √5)/2
I have no idea how. Rationalising doesn't really do much good. Just tell me where to start.
 
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Multiplying the original expression with ##\sqrt{2}/\sqrt{2}## will give you ##\sqrt{6-2\sqrt{5}}## in the numerator. Then think of the terms under the radical as having the form of ##(a-b)^2 = a^2-2ab+b^2##.
 
Could you please elaborate? I'm not getting anywhere. I assume you mean use something like completing the square but I can't do it.
 
blue_leaf77 said:
What do you get after multiplying the original expression with ##\frac{\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{2}}##?

Oh I got that, ie √(6-2√5) ÷ 2
I don't get what I'm supposed to do after this.
 
erisedk said:
√(6-√5) ÷ 2
It is √(6-2√5) ÷ 2. Then express the terms under the radical in the form I wrote in post #2, that is, write ##6-2√5 = a^2+b^2-2ab## . FInd the right pair of ##a## and ##b## such that the LHS is equal to RHS.