im studying radicals and im having trouble....i need help on this one....i really don't know how to write but here it goes...

the nth root is 4square root of 5 times the nth root is 4 square root of 5...i need to simplify the expression

I don't understand the expression as the text you have given.

"the nth root is 4square root of 5 times the nth root is 4 square root of 5"

Is this exactly as presented in the question you were given?

i don't know how to write it....its square root of 5 with the 4 on the left side times the square root of 5 with the 4 on the left side

OK

4sqrt5 x 4 sqrt5

another way to write this (struggling with the limits of text only!) is

5^(1/4)x5^(1/4)

(^ means to the power of so 10^2=100)

or 5 to power quarter x 5 to power quarter.

When you multiply two numbers with powers together you add the powers.
e.g. 10^2 x 10^2 = 10^4

or 100^(1/2) x 100^(1/2)=100^1 (or =100)

so

5^(1/4)x5^(1/4) =?

Does this help?

so the answer would be 5^1/2....is that right???

Yes

To simplify the expression, let's break it down step by step:

1. Start with the expression: nth root of (4√5) times nth root of (4√5).

2. Recall that when multiplying radicals with the same index (n), we can combine them by multiplying the radicands (the values inside the radical).

3. So, multiply 4√5 by 4√5:

(4√5) × (4√5) = 4 × 4 × (√5 × √5)

4. Multiply 4 by 4:

4 × 4 = 16

5. Multiply √5 by √5:

(√5 × √5) = 5

6. Now, we have 16 times 5, which equals:

16 × 5 = 80

7. Therefore, the simplified expression is 80.

In summary, the nth root of (4√5) times the nth root of (4√5) simplifies to 80.