Hello All, so I'm currently working in the MGMAT Quant Foundations book! I'm currently reviewing fractions and radicals and I came across this problem.
(sqrt(25)/sqrt(10)) *(sqrt(8)/sqrt(15) =
I was able to break numbers into primes really quick and cancel out, but when I checked my answer in the book they left Sqrt(3) in the denominator
book answer (2/sqrt(3))
What I did (2/sqrt(3)) * sqrt(3) = ((2*sqrt(3))/3)
What is the proper convention? I thought you should never have a radical in the denominator?
Convention for Fractions with Radicals!
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- Patrick_GMATFix
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You are right about the convention, but "never" is too strong. Your answer is mathematically equivalent to the book's answer so your answer is right. On the test, let the answer choices guide you. Most of the time you will need to get rid of the root in the denominator, but not necessarily every time.
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Hi kdn508,
As a general rule, radicals in the denominator are "frowned upon", so your "math move" would be required. Patrick does bring up a fair point though - be prepared to adjust your answer to what the answer choices give you to work with. Sometimes you'll have to convert fractions to decimals (and vice versa) or convert units to other units (dollars to cents, minutes to seconds, etc.), so do enough work until the answers give you a reason to stop.
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As a general rule, radicals in the denominator are "frowned upon", so your "math move" would be required. Patrick does bring up a fair point though - be prepared to adjust your answer to what the answer choices give you to work with. Sometimes you'll have to convert fractions to decimals (and vice versa) or convert units to other units (dollars to cents, minutes to seconds, etc.), so do enough work until the answers give you a reason to stop.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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A good example of why you should check the answers before you start solving. A radical in the denominator should stand out as a little weird.
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