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Mathematics 16 Online
luvvdani1516:

Can someone help?? I don't understand how to solve this. The screenshot is below in the comments.

luvvdani1516:

luvvdani1516:

@smokeybrown

luvvdani1516:

@astrid1

Astrid1:

Almost done writing it 💀

snowflake0531:

Let's take one term at a time \[\sqrt{108x^2y^3}\] We can separate it, and then put it back together \[\sqrt{108x^2y^3}=\sqrt{108}\times\sqrt{x^2}\times\sqrt{y^3}\] can you simplify that ^

luvvdani1516:

@astrid1 wrote:
Almost done writing it 💀
Okay

Astrid1:

@snowflake0531 wrote:
Let's take one term at a time \[\sqrt{108x^2y^3}\] We can separate it, and then put it back together \[\sqrt{108x^2y^3}=\sqrt{108}\times\sqrt{x^2}\times\sqrt{y^3}\] can you simplify that ^
💀 Thanks. Although I was jut about to type it on here 👀

luvvdani1516:

I'm not the best at understanding algebra 💀

563blackghost:

Follow as snow said. You first need to split the equation in order to be able to simplify. First simplify \(\bf{\sqrt108}\) how would this simplify?

563blackghost:

https://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/x2f8bb11595b61c86:rational-exponents-radicals/x2f8bb11595b61c86:simplifying-square-roots/a/simplifying-square-roots-review Khan academy shows how to simplify radicals quite well. It's very informative on the steps to the conclusion. You should take a look at it.

luvvdani1516:

Okay, thank you! I'll look into that for help!

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