![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYFArGDeh-iXt0oVQ5kpsUCU-H9Qw2fZjCBmiAD6i21-07KWYXdKBMwP6_3ir077THa5FgHi9gKYciEG9E6RGBjSBjsZdag4NJfhs-cb81LYgAAP7GkwfJ-cnnH9AEIURRRaAfhmrKXDQ/s320/Blogger+Pic.jpg)
Roots" (or "radicals") are the "opposite" operation of applying exponents; you can "undo" a power with a radical, and a radical can "undo" a power. For instance, if you square 2, you get 4, and if you "take the square root of 4", you get 2; if you square 3, you get 9, and if you "take the square root of 9", you get 3: Copyright © Elizabeth Stapel 1999-2011 All Rights Reserved![2^2 = 4, so sqrt(4) = 2; 3^2 = 9, so sqrt(9) = 3](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad02.gif)
The "
" symbol is called the "radical"symbol. (Technically, just the "check mark" part of the symbol is the radical; the line across the top is called the "vinculum".) The expression "
" is read as "root nine", "radical nine", or "the square root of nine".You can raise numbers to powers other than just 2; you can cube things, raise them to the fourth power, raise them to the 100th power, and so forth. In the same way, you can take the cube root of a number, the fourth root, the 100th root, and so forth. To indicate some root other than a square root, you use the same radical symbol, but you insert a number into the radical, tucking it into the "check mark" part. For instance:![4^3 = 64, so the cube root of 64 equals 4](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad002.gif)
The "3" in the above is the "index" of the radical; the "64" is "the argument of the radical", also called "the radicand". Since most radicals you see are square roots, the index is not included on square roots. While "
" would be technically correct, I've never seen it used.
![2^2 = 4, so sqrt(4) = 2; 3^2 = 9, so sqrt(9) = 3](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad02.gif)
![4^3 = 64, so the cube root of 64 equals 4](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad002.gif)
ADVERTISEMENT
| |
- a square (second) root is written as
![radical symbol](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad17.gif)
- a cube (third) root is written as
![cbrt()](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad16.gif)
- a fourth root is written as
![fourth-root()](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad18.gif)
- a fifth root is written as:
![fifth-root()](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad19.gif)
![sqrt(3)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad03.gif)
![sqrt(3)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad03.gif)
![sqrt(3)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad03.gif)
![sqrt(3)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad03.gif)
![sqrt(3) = 1.732050808 (approx)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad04.gif)
![sqrt(3)](http://www.purplemath.com/modules/radicals/rad03.gif)
No comments:
Post a Comment