What are surds, and how are they simplified?
Surds are a special type of irrational number expressed in root form that cannot be simplified into a rational number. They commonly appear as square roots, cube roots, or higher roots that do not result in whole numbers.
For example :
- √9 = 3 (rational)
- √2 = 1.414… (irrational) → a surd
A surd must meet two conditions:
- It must contain a root symbol (√, ∛,etc.).
- It must not simplify into an integer or a fraction.
Common surds include √2, √3, √5, √7, and cube roots like ³√6.
Surds are especially common in geometry (e.g., diagonals of squares), trigonometry, algebra, and fields such as engineering and physics, where exact values are required.
Characteristics of Surds
Surds have the following properties:
1. They are irrational
They cannot be written as a ratio of two integers. Their decimal expansions are:
- non-terminating
- non-repeating
Example:
√5 = 2.2360679… (continues forever)
2. They remain in root form
Some roots simplify to integers:
- √4 = 2
- ³√8 = 2
These are not surds because they simplify completely.
Roots that do not simplify remain as surds:
- √3
- √7
- ³√5
3. They cannot be expressed exactly as decimals
This is why surds are often kept in radical form for precision during calculations.
How to Simplify Surds
Simplifying surds means rewriting them in the cleanest form.
Step 1: Find perfect-square factors
Example:
√18
= √(9 × 2)
= √9 × √2
= 3√2
Step 2: Use product and quotient rules
- √(ab) = √a × √b
- √(a/b) = √a ÷ √b
Example:
√72
= √(36 × 2)
= 6√2
Another example:
√(45/5)
= √9
= 3
More practice examples
- √50 = √(25 × 2) = 5√2
- √32 = √(16 × 2) = 4√2
- √12 = √(4 × 3) = 2√3
Practical Applications of Surds
Surds appear naturally in many real-world calculations.
1. Geometry
Surds often appear when calculating lengths:
- diagonal of a square = a√2
- distance formula = √((x₂ – x₁)² + (y₂ – y₁)²)
Architects, designers, and builders use surds for exact measurements.
2. Algebra
Surds arise when solving:
- quadratic equations
- radical expressions
- simplifying polynomial roots
Example:
x² = 2 → x = ±√2
3. Engineering and Physics
Engineers use surds:
- in stress and force calculations
- in electrical equations like root-mean-square values
- when applying the Pythagorean theorem in design
Surds give precision without rounding, which is essential for accuracy and safety.
Summary
Surds are irrational numbers expressed in root form that cannot be simplified into rational numbers. They are essential in mathematics because they preserve exactness, appear naturally in geometric and algebraic problems, and have important applications in science and engineering. Understanding how to identify and simplify surds allows learners to handle advanced mathematical concepts with confidence.