Express 4/(2-√2) in the form a+b√2 and write down the values of a and b.

This is a typical exam question which some students may find confusing.The trick to this question is realising that you have to rationalise the denominator. (Topic: Surds)4/(2-√2) = 4/(2-√2) x (2+√2)/(2+√2)To rationalise, you multiply both the top and the bottom by the conjugate of the denominator. In simple terms, the conjugate is the same as the denominator but with the opposite sign. you are essentially multiplying by 1 so you haven’t actually changed the expression.= 4(2+√2) / (2-√2)(2+√2)= (8+4√2) / (4 + 2√2 -2√2 -2)= (8+4√2) / (4-2) As you can see, this has removed the complicated square root from the denominator which makes it easier to simplify.= 8/2 + (4√2)/2=4 + 2√2The rest is simple calculation to get the form the question asks for. So…a = 4, b = 2

Answered by William A. Maths tutor

20430 Views

See similar Maths GCSE tutors

Related Maths GCSE answers

All answers ▸

Find the equation of the line in the form of y=mx+c given that two points on the line are (3,1) and (6,10)


The equation of line A is y = 6x -4. The equation of line B is 2y - 12x + 14 = 0. Are these two lines parallel?


Ian earns £420 a week after a 5% rise. What was his pay before?


Jason and Mary leave their houses at the same time. They travel towards each other, Mary at 20km/h and Jason at 15km/h. They pass each other after an hour and a half. What was the original distance between them when they started?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact usWhatsapp logoMessage us on Whatsapptelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2024

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy