In exactly the same way as you multiply any other number by a constant.
3 times sqrt(5) = 3*sqrt(5)
square root 6
It is the square root of 8
Simple...multiply that square root by itself.
Depends on the situation. You usually have to multiply numerator and denominator by some number or expression. Examples: 1 / square root of 2 Here, you have to multiply numerator and denominator by the square root of 2. 1 / (square root of 2 + square root of 3) Here, you have to multiply numerator and denominator by (square root of 2 - square root of 3).
0
10
The square root of 4 is 2, if you multiply that by the square root of 49, which is 7, you get 14.
Multiply the root by itself.
An example may help. If you have the fraction 1 / (2 + root(3)), where root() is the square root function, you multiply top and bottom by (2 - root(3)). If you multiply everything out, you will have no square root in the denominator, instead, you will have a square root in the numerator. If the denominator is only a root, eg root(3), you multiply top and bottom by root(3).
a+ square root of b has a conjugate a- square root of b and this is used rationalize the denominator when it contains a square root. If we want to multiply 5 x square root of 10 by something to get rid of the radical you can multiply it by square root of 10. But if we look at 5x( square root of 10 as ) 0+ 5x square root of 10 then the conjugate would be -5x square root of 10
It is: 2484.572398
Yes, every number is a square root, you just multiply it by itself.