Working with Surds
Surds follow algebraic rules when you're expanding brackets. For example, when multiplying expressions like (5+√3)(5-√3), you can use the difference of squares pattern: multiply the first terms, the outer terms, the inner terms, and the last terms.
When simplifying surds, watch for simplification opportunities. In the example (5+√3)(5-√3) = 25-5√3+5√3-3 = 22, the √3 terms cancel each other out. This pattern is particularly useful when rationalising denominators.
Rationalising the denominator means eliminating any surds from the bottom of a fraction. We do this by multiplying both numerator and denominator by an expression that makes the denominator rational. For example, to rationalise 1/√3, we multiply by √3/√3 to get √3/3.
Remember: When rationalising a denominator with a single term like √2, multiply by the same surd. With expressions like (√18+10)/√2, multiply by √2/√2 and distribute through the numerator carefully.