Son brought home a hand made worksheet that teacher did not go over and can't find examples anywhere.

Multiply each expression by its conjugate.
A. Square root of (13)-2
B. 2+3Square root (5)
C. Square root(3) minus Square root(7)

Thanks

When you multiply a binomial by its conjugate, you are duplicating the pattern of the difference of squares:

a^2 - b^2 = (a+b)(a-b)

so
(sqrt(13) - 2)(sqrt(13) + 2)
= 13 - 4
= 9

(2+3sqrt(5))(2-3sqrt(5))
= 4 - 45
= -41

try the last one, let me know what you get

He got 10

not correct

(sqrt(3) - sqrt(7))(sqrt(3)+sqrt(7))
= 3 - 7
= -4

Thank you

To multiply each expression by its conjugate, you need to remember that the conjugate of a number is obtained by changing the sign between two terms. For example, the conjugate of a + b is a - b.

Let's go through each expression and multiply it by its conjugate:

A. Square root of (13) - 2:
Take the expression (√13 - 2) and multiply it by its conjugate, (√13 + 2):

(√13 - 2)(√13 + 2)
= (√13)^2 - (2)^2 [using the difference of squares formula]
= 13 - 4
= 9

So the answer for expression A is 9.

B. 2 + 3√5:
Take the expression (2 + 3√5) and multiply it by its conjugate, which is (2 - 3√5):

(2 + 3√5)(2 - 3√5)
= (2)^2 - (3√5)^2 [using the difference of squares formula]
= 4 - 9(5)
= 4 - 45
= -41

So the answer for expression B is -41.

C. Square root(3) minus Square root(7):
Take the expression (√3 - √7) and multiply it by its conjugate, which is (√3 + √7):

(√3 - √7)(√3 + √7)
= (√3)^2 - (√7)^2 [using the difference of squares formula]
= 3 - 7
= -4

So the answer for expression C is -4.

To solve these types of problems, multiply each expression by its conjugate and simplify using the difference of squares formula if applicable.