Let $u = \sqrt{3+\sqrt{2}}\;$. Is $\sqrt{7} \in \mathbb{Q}\left(u\right)$? Equivalently, is $\mathbb{Q}(u)$ a splitting field of $u$ over $\mathbb{Q}\,$?
The original question is whether or not $\mathbb{Q}\left(u\right)$ is a splitting field of $u$ over $\mathbb{Q}$. The minimal polynomial of $u$ is $x^4-6x^2+7$, and the four roots are given by the four values of $\pm\sqrt{3\pm\sqrt{2}}\;$. Then the hard part of showing that it's a splitting field comes down to showing $\sqrt{3-\sqrt{2}} \in \mathbb{Q}\left(u\right)$. We get that
$$ \sqrt{3-\sqrt{2}} \;\;=\;\; \sqrt{3-\sqrt{2}} \left(\frac{u}{u}\right) \;\;=\;\; \frac{\sqrt{7}}{u} \;\;. $$
The inverse of $u$ is in there because it's a field, but I can't decide whether or not $\sqrt{7} \in \mathbb{Q}\left(u\right)\;$.