Math, asked by arpitgay2005, 10 months ago

Rationalise the denominator

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Answers

Answered by pinkikumaridevi314
1

Step-by-step explanation:

Hope it helps.

Plz mark it as brainliest ans.

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

\frac{5\sqrt{3} + \sqrt{5} }{5} (OR) \sqrt{3} + \frac{\sqrt{5} }{5}

Step-by-step explanation:

The explanation is provided in the picture...

The 1st thing to be done is to multiply the numerator & the denominator with its conjugate:

If denominator is : (a - b)

It's conjugate will be : (a + b)

So, the numerator will be: ' x × (a + b) '

xa + xb

With denominator,

a² - b²

because, (a + b) × (a - b) = a² - b²...

Replace;

x ⇄ 14

a ⇄ 5√3

b ⇄ √5

You'll surely get the procedure...

Hope you've understood...

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