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Rationalize 2 divided by the square root of 7

User Fela
by
7.9k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:


(2√(7))/(7)

Explanation:

There's a radical in the denominator of the fraction


(2)/(√(7)).

Multiplying the denominator
√(7) by a certain number will get rid of its radical part. What number will serve the purpose? There's only one square root in the denominator, so multiplying the square root
√(7) by itself will do.

Multiple both the fraction by


(√(7))/(√(7)),

which is the same as multiplying by
1,

will rationalize the denominator without changing the value of the fraction. Here's how it works:


\begin{array}{ll} (2)/(√(7))\\= (2)/(√(7)) * 1 & \text{Doing so does not change the value.}\\= (2)/(√(7)) * (√(7))/(√(7)) & \text{The value of} \; \frac{√(7)} {√(7)} \; \text{is} \; 1 \text{.} \\=(2√(7))/((√(7))^(2)) & \text{Square the square root} \; √(7)\text{.}\\= (2√(7))/(7)\\\end{array}.

User Donette
by
8.2k points

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