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IGCSE MATH: SURDS

Surds for IGCSE Maths (CIE)

What is a Surd?

A surd is an irrational number expressed as the root of a number that is not a perfect power. The most common surds are square roots of non-square numbers.

  • Examples of Surds: 2, 3, 57, 10
  • NOT Surds: 4 = 2, 27 = 3, 1 = 1 (These are rational numbers)

1. Simplifying Surds

The goal is to express a surd in its simplest form by identifying the largest square factor.

a × b = a × b

Method:

  1. Find the largest perfect square factor of the number under the root
  2. Rewrite the surd as a product
  3. Simplify the root of the perfect square
Example 1: Simplify 50
150 = 25 × 2
2= 25 × 2
3= 5 × 2

Answer: 52

Example 2: Simplify 72
172 = 36 × 2
2= 36 × 2
3= 6 × 2

Answer: 62

2. Manipulating Surds (The Four Operations)

A. Adding and Subtracting Surds

You can only combine surds that are "like terms" (they have the same irrational part).

ab + cb = (a + c)b
Example 3: Simplify 35 + 75
35 + 75 = (3 + 7)5 = 105
Example 4: Simplify 43 + 25 - 3 + 35
(43 - 3) + (25 + 35) = 33 + 55

This is fully simplified as 3 and 5 are different.

B. Multiplying Surds

Use the rule:

a × b = a × b
Example 5: Simplify 3 × 12
3 × 12 = 3 × 12 = 36 = 6
Example 6: Simplify (32) × (57)
(3 × 5) × (2 × 7) = 15 × 14 = 1514
Example 7: Expand and simplify 2(8 - 3)
(2 × 8) - (2 × 3) = 16 - 6 = 4 - 6

C. Dividing Surds

Use the rule:

a ÷ b = a ÷ b
Example 8: Simplify 20 ÷ 5
20 ÷ 5 = 20 ÷ 5 = 4 = 2

3. Rationalising the Denominator

This is the process of removing a surd from the denominator of a fraction.

Case 1: Denominator is a Single Surd

Multiply the numerator and denominator by the surd in the denominator.

a b
=
a × b b × b
=
ab b
Example 9: Rationalise
5 3
1
5 3
×
3 3
2=
5 × 3 3 × 3
3=
53 3

Case 2: Denominator is a Binomial

Multiply the numerator and denominator by the conjugate of the denominator.

Example 10: Rationalise
4 3 - 2
1Conjugate of (3 - 2) is (3 + 2)
2Multiply top and bottom:
4 3 - 2
×
3 + 2 3 + 2
3Numerator: 4 × (3 + 2) = 12 + 42
4Denominator: (3 - 2)(3 + 2) = 3² - (2)² = 9 - 2 = 7
5Final Answer:
12 + 42 7

This can also be written as

12 7
+
42 7

4. Writing a Mixed Rational Number with a Surd

A mixed number containing a surd is an expression of the form a ± bc, where a and b are rational numbers.

Example 11: Express
6 + 218 2
in the form a + bc
1Simplify the surd first: 18 = 9 × 2 = 32
2Substitute:
6 + 2 × 32 2
=
6 + 62 2
3Divide both terms in the numerator by 2:
6 2
+
62 2
= 3 + 32

Final Answer: 3 + 32

Key Rules to Memorise

  • a × a = a
  • a × b = ab
  • a ÷ b = a/b
  • (a + b)(a - b) = a² - b² (The difference of two squares)

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

  • Always Simplify First: Before any operation, check if the surds can be simplified. 12 + 27 = 23 + 33 = 53, not 39
  • Identify Like Terms: Only surds with the same number under the root can be added or subtracted
  • Rationalise Fully: A final answer must never have a surd in the denominator
  • Show Clear Working: When rationalising binomial denominators, writing the multiplication step clearly helps avoid errors

Summary of Process

  1. Simplify the surd by taking out square factors
  2. Identify like terms for addition/subtraction
  3. Multiply/Divide using the rules a × b = ab and a ÷ b = a/b
  4. Rationalise any fraction with a surd in the denominator
    • Single surd denominator: Multiply by that surd
    • Binomial denominator: Multiply by its conjugate

Good luck with your revision!

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