I'm slightly confused on the subject of conjugates and how to define them.
I know that for a complex number $ a - bi $ the conjugate is $ a + bi $ and similarly for $ 1 + \sqrt 2 $ the conjugate is $ 1 - \sqrt2 $ because when multiplied it gives a rational answer.
But how about for just a simple real number like 1 or 2, what would be the conjugate for this? Does a conjugate exist for a real number?
I'm new to this topic and have tried searching Maths SE and Google in vain; any help would be appreciated.
Careful! These are two different notions of conjugate.
First we have the complex conjugate, given by $\overline{a+bi} = a-bi$. Then, since we can write a real number $x$ as $x+0i$, the complex conjugate of a real number is itself.
There is also a second idea of a rational conjugate, where as in your example, if $a,b$ are rational and $d$ is squarefree, the conjugate of $a+b\sqrt{d}$ is $a-b\sqrt{d}$.
There is a connection between these two ideas. In general, given a field extension $E/F$, take an algebraic element $\alpha$ of $E$, and let $m(x)$ be it's minimal polynomial over $F$. Then we call the other roots of $m$ in $E$ the conjugates of $\alpha$.
In the case of the extensions $\mathbb{C}/\mathbb{R}$ and $\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{d})/ \mathbb{Q}$ this agrees with the above.