How to rewrite $7-\sqrt 5$ in root form without a minus sign ? For clarity "root form " means an expression that only contains a finite amount of positive integers , additions , substractions , multiplications and root extractions (sqrt, cuberoot etc).
For example some quintic equations cannot be solved in root form.
A " root form without a minus sign " means an expression that only contains a finite amount of positive integers , additions , multiplications and root extractions (sqrt , cuberoot etc).
So the solution could look something like this :
$$ 7-\sqrt5 = \sqrt{...+1+(...)^{\frac{2}{3}}}+\sqrt{...+2(...)^{\frac{1}{3}}}$$
How to solve such problems ?
EDIT
Warning: $\dfrac{44}{7+\sqrt 5}$ is not a solution, since no divisions are allowed!
I got that answer 3 times now so I put it in the OP as a warning , not just the comments.
$$7 - \sqrt{5} = (7 - \sqrt{5}) \bigg(\frac{7 + \sqrt{5}}{7 + \sqrt{5}} \bigg) = \frac{44}{7 + \sqrt{5}}$$