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The two roots a+(radical)b and a-(radaical)b are called __________ radicals

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User UloBasEI
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2 Answers

5 votes

They are called conjugate roots

answered
User Cla
by
8.2k points
6 votes

Answer:

Irrational conjugates.

Explanation:

The given roots are


(a+√(b))   (a-√(b))

The two expressions are conjugate.

Here
√(b) is an irrational number.

The irrational conjugates theorem states that if a + √b is an irrational root to a polynomial, then its irrational conjugate a - √b is also a root.

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User Jaffer
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