Math, asked by nicanorthapa14, 6 months ago

So I have an answer here but I am having trouble to understand with the circled part. So I would be grateful if anyone of you would explain me in detail how √3/3 would give √3.
Best explanation will be marked as brainliest. ​

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Answers

Answered by himanik2005
2

Answer:

That's so FALSE !!!!

Numerator = √3.

Denominator = 3 = √3 × √3 .

So one pair of √3 gets cancelled out each from the numerator and denominator, giving you, 1/√3.

The answer can never ever be √3 !!!!!

Hope this helps !!!

Answered by tankalasusritha06
1

Answer:

here the answer would be √3[=3÷√3]

Step-by-step explanation:

3 can be written as multiple of two roots which is

√3*√3(√3^2=3)

=> 3÷√3 = √3*√3÷√3

( root three in numerator and root three in the denominator would cancel)

=>3÷√3=√3

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