Math, asked by manu4475657, 2 months ago

rationalise the denominaters of 1/√5+√2​

Answers

Answered by pratikasaho1234
0

Answer:

Above picture I solve your question

Attachments:
Answered by Tan201
0

Answer:

\frac{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2}  }{3  }

Step-by-step explanation:

\frac{1}{\sqrt{5}+\sqrt{2} }

Multiplying both numerator and denominator by \sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2},

=\frac{1}{\sqrt{5}+\sqrt{2} } × \frac{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2} }

\frac{(1)(\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2})  }{(\sqrt{5}+\sqrt{2})(\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2})  }

\frac{(1)(\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2})  }{(\sqrt{5}+\sqrt{2})(\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2})  }

\frac{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2}  }{(\sqrt{5})^{2}-(\sqrt{2})^{2}  }  ((a+b)(a-b)=a^{2}-b^{2})

\frac{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2}  }{5-2  } ((\sqrt{5})^{2}=5, (\sqrt{2})^{2}=2)

\frac{\sqrt{5}-\sqrt{2}  }{3  }

Similar questions