Probability and geometry questions requiring simplified denominators.
Mini examples
\(\tfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}} = \tfrac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\).
\(\tfrac{1}{\sqrt{5}} = \tfrac{\sqrt{5}}{5}\).
Pitfalls
Forgetting to multiply both numerator and denominator by the surd.
Leaving the denominator irrational when the question explicitly asks for rational form.
Not simplifying the final fraction fully.
Exam strategy
Always show the rationalisation step explicitly.
Check if the surd simplifies before rationalising (e.g. \(\sqrt{12} = 2\sqrt{3}\)).
In trigonometry, remember to give exact forms (like \(\sqrt{2}/2\)) instead of decimals.
Summary
Rationalising a simple surd is a straightforward process: multiply top and bottom by the same surd to remove it from the denominator. The result is cleaner, exact, and consistent with exam expectations.