Math, asked by siddhiharne277, 2 months ago

Rationalize the denominator
1/(√4-√3)​

Answers

Answered by anjaligupta23feb2004
1

There you go!!! Hope this helps!

Attachments:
Answered by ss5134411
0

 \sqrt{4}   +  \sqrt{3}

Step-by-step explanation:

 \frac{1}{( \sqrt{4} -  \sqrt{3} ) }  \times  \frac{( \sqrt{4} +  \sqrt{3} ) }{( \sqrt{4}  +  \sqrt{ 3}) }

 \frac{( \sqrt{4} +  \sqrt{3})  }{( {  \sqrt  4)^{2}  - (  \sqrt3) ^{2}  } }

because \: (a - b)(a + b) =  {a}^{2} -  {b}^{2}

 \frac{( \sqrt{4} +  \sqrt{3})  }{4 - 3}

 \frac{( \sqrt{4} +  \sqrt{3} ) }{1}

 \sqrt{4}  +  \sqrt{3} \:  \:  \:  \:  \:  \:  answer

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