125k views
2 votes
Maxine is another student who has been studying radicals too. After working in this unit for awhile, she came up with this “rule”:√x+y=√x+√y

Is this “rule” true or false? why?

Maxine is another student who has been studying radicals too. After working in this-example-1

1 Answer

1 vote

That is definitely not true. If we had started with
√(x) +√(y) we could not add them. This is because not only do the indexes have to be the same (square root, cubed root, fourth root, etc), the radicands have to be the same as well. While the rules are not quite so restrictive with multiplying where you can in fact multiply those square roots together, it is breaking the rules to add them. If you can't add them to put them back together, then you can't take them apart like that in the first place.

User Mike Monteiro
by
8.0k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories