Simplifying surds as numerators

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Simplifying surds often involves eliminating roots from denominators while leaving numerators with roots acceptable. The expression √3/2 can be rewritten as 1/2 * √3, which clarifies the simplification process. The discussion emphasizes that both forms of the expression are valid, but the preference is to avoid roots in the denominator for clarity. Understanding the manipulation of fractions helps in grasping the simplification of surds. Overall, the focus is on maintaining mathematical clarity by appropriately managing surds in expressions.
MattVonFat
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Hi,

I was reading about surds and saw this:

[PLAIN]http://www.mattvonfat.com/eq.png

I'm probably not as familiar with simplifying fractions as I should be but I think I get that it's being split into two fractions and that √3/2 is the same as 1/2*√3 but I don't understand what's actually being done to √3/2 to simplify it and why the original expression isn't left as it is.

Any help would be much appreciated!

Thanks,
Matt
 
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Nothing wrong with either form of the expression.
Usually we eliminate roots from denominators.
Numerators with roots are fine.
 
it might help to think of it like this:

2/3 - 1/3 = (2-1)/3

So reverse would be the same:

(2-1)/3 = 2/3 - 1/3

if 3 were negative, then the negatives would evaluate:

(2-1)/-3 = 2/-3 - 1/-3 = -2/3 - (-1/3) = -2/3 + 1/3
 
Seemingly by some mathematical coincidence, a hexagon of sides 2,2,7,7, 11, and 11 can be inscribed in a circle of radius 7. The other day I saw a math problem on line, which they said came from a Polish Olympiad, where you compute the length x of the 3rd side which is the same as the radius, so that the sides of length 2,x, and 11 are inscribed on the arc of a semi-circle. The law of cosines applied twice gives the answer for x of exactly 7, but the arithmetic is so complex that the...

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