no because a perfect square has to be an whole number and the square root of 6 is aproximately 2.449489742783178
The idea is to take any perfect square out of the square root sign. root(24) = root(4 x 6) = root(4) x root(6) = 2 x root(6).The idea is to take any perfect square out of the square root sign. root(24) = root(4 x 6) = root(4) x root(6) = 2 x root(6).The idea is to take any perfect square out of the square root sign. root(24) = root(4 x 6) = root(4) x root(6) = 2 x root(6).The idea is to take any perfect square out of the square root sign. root(24) = root(4 x 6) = root(4) x root(6) = 2 x root(6).
No.No.No.No.
no, it is not a perfect square, but it can be reduced to: 6 time the square root of 6
No. The two closest squares are 49 and 36. The square root of 49 being 7 and the square root of 36 being 6. you can conclude that the square root of 42 isn't a perfect square, but it's square root is between 7 and 6.
200 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.
345 is not a perfect square and neither is its square root.
30 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.
500 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.
38 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.
A principal square root is any square root that's answer is positive, and a perfect square root is a square root that's answer is an integer.
(x - 6 times the square root of 6)(x + 6 times the square root of 6)
Yes. The square root of a fraction is the square root of the numerator over the square root of the denominator. First simplify the fraction (making mixed numbers into improper fractions). Now consider the numerator and denominator separately as whole numbers. Only perfect squares (the squares of whole numbers) have rational square roots. If either, or both, of the numerator and denominator is not a perfect square, the square root of the fraction will be irrational √(11/6) = (√11)/(√6). Neither 11 nor 6 is a perfect square, thus √(11/6) is irrational.