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Example Question #41 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
When multiplying radicals, we can just multiply the values inside the radicand.
This can be simplified to
which is the cubic root of the answer.
Example Question #42 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
We can simplify by finding a perfect square.
Next we can reduce to
.
When dealing with radicals in the denominator, we simplify it by multiplying top and bottom by the radical.
Example Question #43 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
The first step I'd recommend is to multiply everything and put it all underneath one radical: . Then, recall that for every two of the same term, cross them out underneath the radical and put one of them outside. Attack each term separately:
,
, and
. Put those all together to get:
.
Example Question #142 : Simplifying Radicals
Combine radicals:
Simplify the radical leftover:
Example Question #241 : Radicals
Divide and simplify:
None of these
Divide outside number:
Divide radicals:
Simplify radical:
Example Question #42 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
Expand, then simplify:
Foil:
Example Question #151 : Simplifying Radicals
Simplify:
Multiply the numbers inside the radical.
Factor out a perfect square of
.
Example Question #4142 : Algebra Ii
Simplify:
Multiply the numbers inside the radical.
Factor out a perfect square of
.
Example Question #43 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
Simplify:
Divide the numbers inside the radicals.
Example Question #44 : Multiplying And Dividing Radicals
Simplify:
When multiplying radicals, simply multiply the numbers inside the radical with each other. Therefore:
We cannot further simplify because both of the numbers multiplied with each other were prime numbers.
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