Negative square root is -√Square root of negative one is i.
You don't. If the negative sign is outside the radical, then you take the square root of the number and apply the negative. If the negative sign is inside the radical, you will have an imaginary number.
Just take the square root, and put a minus sign in front of it.
square roots of a negative number are imaginary, where i = square root (-1) sqrt (-2500) = sqrt (2500) i = 50 i
I'm not quite sure, but when the number inside the radical (square root sign) is negative, there is a no real-number solution.
The square root is generally positive or negative and it is only the context of the question that will tell you whether it is the positive root or the negative root. For example, if you are solving for the lengths of the sides of a square, a negative measure makes no sense so it must be the positive root.
The square root of 3 times the negative square root of 3 can be calculated by multiplying the two square roots together. This results in -3, as the square root of 3 multiplied by the square root of 3 is the square root of 9, which simplifies to 3. Multiplying this by the negative sign gives us -3.
You can't have the square root of a negative number, because when you multiply two numbers of the same sign, you cannot get a negative number. (sqrt) -1 is an imaginary number symbolized by i.
square root of a negative number is imaginary square root of negative 1 is defined as i square root of negative 144 is sqrt ((144)(-1)) = 12i
The square root of -6400 is not a real number because the square root of a negative number is not defined in the real number system.
The Sign for square root is One of them ticks
The symbol for a a square root sign is: √