An expression such as root(3) + 2 (square root of 3, added to 2) can not be simplified. Of course, you can convert the square root to a decimal and then add, to get an approximate result.
radical expressiona radical expression
The square root of 12 may be simplified to 2 times the square root of 3.
The square root of 252 in simplified radical form is 2√63.
yes
Only if the term under the radical (square root sign) can be simplified to a rational expression. For example, √(4x2).
An expression such as root(3) + 2 (square root of 3, added to 2) can not be simplified. Of course, you can convert the square root to a decimal and then add, to get an approximate result.
The square root of 137 cannot be simplified.
radical expressiona radical expression
The square root of 12 may be simplified to 2 times the square root of 3.
The square root of 252 in simplified radical form is 2√63.
A radical expression is an expression that involves a square root, cubic root, etc.
The details depend on the specific radical expression. Normally, you'll want to: * Avoid a perfect square under a radical sign. Take it out, by separating the radical into two parts. Example: root (x squared y) = root (x squared) x root (y) = x root (y). * Avoid a radical sign in the denominator. If you multiply numerator and denominator by the same square root, you get an expression in which there are roots in the numerator, but not in the denominator.
yes
its already simplified. the solution would be √181
The square root of 28 in simplified radical form is...2 * Square root of 7
radical 36 = square root 36 = 6