I was reading the 9th lecture of Feynman; here is the excerpt of my concern:
Let’s go back now to our particular example of the ammonia molecule in an electric field. Using the values for H11, H22, and H12 given in (9.14) and (9.15), we get for the energies of the two stationary states $$E_{I}=E_0+\sqrt{A^2+\mu^2 \varepsilon^2},\quad E_{II}=E_0-\sqrt{A^2+\mu^2\varepsilon^2} \tag{9.30}$$ [...] When the electric field is zero, the two energies are, of course, just $E_0±A.$ When an electric field is applied, the splitting between the two levels increases. The splitting increases at first slowly with $E$, but eventually becomes proportional to $E$. (The curve is a hyperbola.) For enormously strong fields, the energies are just $$E_I=E_0+μ\varepsilon =H_{11}\;,\;E_{II}=E_0−μ\varepsilon=H_{22}.$$
[...]How can we separate the two molecular states? One method is as follows. The ammonia gas is let out of a little jet and passed through a pair of slits to give a narrow beam.The beam is then sent through a region in which there is a large transverse electric field. The electrodes to produce the field are shaped so that the electric field varies rapidly across the beam. Then the square of the electric field $\mathbf{\varepsilon}\cdot \mathbf{\varepsilon}$ will have a large gradient perpendicular to the beam. Now a molecule in state $|I⟩$ has an energy which increases with $\varepsilon^2$, and therefore this part of the beam will be deflected toward the region of lower $\varepsilon^2.$ A molecule in state $|II⟩$ will, on the other hand, be deflected toward the region of larger $\varepsilon^2$, since its energy decreases as $\varepsilon^2$ increases.
Incidentally, with the electric fields which can be generated in the laboratory, the energy $\varepsilon$ is always much smaller than $A.$ In such cases, the square root in Eqs. (9.30) can be approximated by $$A\biggl( 1+\frac{1}{2}\,\frac{\mu^2\varepsilon ^2}{A^2} \biggr). \tag{9.32}$$ So the energy levels are, for all practical purposes, $$E_{I} =E_0+A+\frac{\mu^2\varepsilon^2}{2A} \; \\ \& \\ E_{II} =E_0-A-\frac{\mu^2\varepsilon^2}{2A}$$
I'm not understanding how Feynman made the square-root term of $(9.30)$ that is, $\sqrt{A^2 + \mu^2\varepsilon^2}$ equal to $(9.32)$ that is, $A\biggl( 1+\dfrac{1}{2}\,\dfrac{\mu^2\varepsilon ^2}{A^2}\biggr)$ ? How did he make the approximation?