How do you simplify 10 over radical seven plus radical two?
\[(10)/(\sqrt{2} +\sqrt{2})\]?
\[10/\sqrt{7+\sqrt{2}}\]
It is \[5/\sqrt{2}\]
\[\sqrt{2} + \sqrt{2} = 2\sqrt{2}\] Therefore 10/ 2sqrt(2) will equal what I have above
What happened to the 7 that was under the radical?
rpeterson is the problem
What was written was different than if it is 7 instead of 2 you are correct but if its 2 than I am correct
\[10/(\sqrt{7}+\sqrt{2}\]
rpeterson there seems to be some confusion on your problem. Please restate the problem
Where is he?
I don't know at first i thought there was two radicals one inside the other as I posted, but now I think there is two separate radicals.
\[(10)\div \sqrt{7}+\sqrt{2}\] ? or : \[(10)/\sqrt{7+\sqrt{2}}\]
I think just wait he come back
If it is \[(10)/(\sqrt{7}+\sqrt{2})\] then\[2(\sqrt{7}-\sqrt{2})\]
yes, right
how about:\[(10)/\sqrt{7+\sqrt{2}}\]
If it is like that Nancy Lam, I don't want to attempt to solve it lol
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