Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.5  Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations

Treat √a as a number you can actually compute with — simplify it, combine it, tidy it.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 6 in this lesson: 6.5.3 Multiplying and dividing roots

6.5.3 Multiplying and dividing roots

Two roots multiply by simply joining their radicands under one sign, and divide by dividing under one sign:

a·b = a·b     and     ab = a/b

Both hold for a, b ≥ 0 (and for division b > 0, since you can't divide by zero). After you join the radicands, always simplify the result. Two examples that come out beautifully clean:

2·8 = 16 = 4      182 = 9 = 3

Multiplying pours both radicands into one root: 2·8 = 16 = 4. Why it works: (2·8)² = 2·8 = 16.
Worked example · join, then simplify

6·3 = 18 = 9·2 = 32. Join first (6·3 = 18), then pull out the square (9).

A coefficient out front just multiplies along: 23 · 52 = (2·5)·3·2 = 106.

🎮 Try itJoin two roots under one sign

Choose a and b, pick × or ÷, and watch them merge into one root — then simplify.

a 2
b 8
op
eastmath.com · 6.5 Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations · 6.5.3 Multiplying and dividing roots