Square Roots and Cube Roots
Square Roots and Cube Roots
Squaring a number and taking the square root are opposite operations. The same is true for cubing a number and finding its cube root. Understanding these concepts is essential for solving algebra and geometry problems.
What is a Square Root?
The square root of a number a is the nonnegative value x that satisfies the equation x2=a. The symbol for a square root is â.
For example, 64â=8 because 82=64.
To quickly solve problems, you should memorize the perfect squares up to 225:
- 12=1â¹1â=1
- 22=4â¹4â=2
- 32=9â¹9â=3
- 42=16â¹16â=4
- 52=25â¹25â=5
- 62=36â¹36â=6
- 72=49â¹49â=7
- 82=64â¹64â=8
- 92=81â¹81â=9
- 102=100â¹100â=10
- 112=121â¹121â=11
- 122=144â¹144â=12
- 132=169â¹169â=13
- 142=196â¹196â=14
- 152=225â¹225â=15
What is a Cube Root?
The cube root of a number a is the value x that satisfies the equation x3=a. The symbol for a cube root is 3â.
Unlike square roots, cube roots can be negative! This is because a negative number multiplied by itself three times remains negative.
- Positive example: 327â=3 because 3Ã3Ã3=27.
- Negative example: 3â8â=â2 because (â2)Ã(â2)Ã(â2)=â8.
Here are the perfect cubes up to 1000 you should know:
- 13=1â¹31â=1
- 23=8â¹38â=2
- 33=27â¹327â=3
- 43=64â¹364â=4
- 53=125â¹3125â=5
- 63=216â¹3216â=6
- 73=343â¹3343â=7
- 83=512â¹3512â=8
- 93=729â¹3729â=9
- 103=1000â¹31000â=10
Estimating Roots of Non-Perfect Squares
Not all numbers are perfect squares. When you need to find the square root of a number like 50, you can estimate it by looking at the perfect squares around it.
Example: Estimate 50â to one decimal place.
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Find the nearest perfect squares: We know that 49 and 64 are the closest perfect squares to 50. Since 49<50<64, it means that 49â<50â<64â. Therefore, 7<50â<8.
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Determine the decimal: The number 50 is much closer to 49 than it is to 64. So, the decimal will be very close to 7.0. Let's test 7.1.
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Test your estimate: 7.1Ã7.1=50.41 Since 50.41 is incredibly close to 50, we can confidently estimate that 50ââ7.1.