Monday, October 4, 2021

Surds Practice Problem Set

In Mathematics, surds are the values in square root that cannot be further simplified into whole numbers or integers. Surds are irrational numbers. The examples of surds are √2, √3, √5, etc., as these values cannot be further simplified. If we further simply them, we get decimal values, such as:

√2  = 1.4142135…

√3 = 1.7320508…

√5 = 2.2360679…


Surds Definition

Surds are the square roots  (√) of numbers that cannot be simplified into a whole or rational number. It cannot be accurately represented in a fraction. In other words, a surd is a root of the whole number that has an irrational value. Consider an example, √2 ≈ 1.414213. It is more accurate if we leave it as a surd √2.

Surds Worksheet

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Surd-Practice-I
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Surd-Practice-II
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Surd-Practice-III

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