Math, asked by poonammaravi54321, 1 month ago

rationalise the denominator of 1/√3+√2

Answers

Answered by kanchanchoubey70
0

Answer:

go and ask your class teacher why are you hear

Answered by Anonymous
1

Rationalise the denominator we get,

 \frac{1}{ \sqrt{3}  +  \sqrt{2} }  \times  \frac{ \sqrt{3}  -  \sqrt{2} }{ \sqrt{3} -  \sqrt{2}  }  =  \frac{ \sqrt{3} -  \sqrt{2}  }{( \sqrt{3} ) {}^{2} - ( \sqrt{2) {}^{2} }  }

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

Substituting the value of √3 and √2, we get 1.732-1.414=0.318.

Similar questions