Find the square root of each of its components, and muliply them together. For example, 36x8 the square root of 36 is 6 the square root of x8 is x4 so the square root of 36x8 is 6x4
Say the monomial is 4a squared. To find the square root to must do each part seperately. So square root of 4 is 2 and the square root of a-squared is |a| because we do not know the sign of a. The answer is 2|a|. If there is anything that cannot be "square rooted" then it would stay under a square root sign and just multiply by 2a as well. The principal root of a number is only its positive root (you can understand that you are looking for the principal root from the sign in front of the radical, which is a positive one)
The square root of the fifth root of x is the tenth root of x.
Square root of x = x^0.5
We use the property of square roots that says the square root of (ab)=square root (a) multiplied by square root of b So square root (4x)=square root (4) mutiplies by square root of x =2(square root (x)) 2sqrt(x)
Yes.
No. A monomial is a polynomial with just one term, so that the power must be only a positive integer.
Find the square root of each of its components, and muliply them together. For example, 36x8 the square root of 36 is 6 the square root of x8 is x4 so the square root of 36x8 is 6x4
Say the monomial is 4a squared. To find the square root to must do each part seperately. So square root of 4 is 2 and the square root of a-squared is |a| because we do not know the sign of a. The answer is 2|a|. If there is anything that cannot be "square rooted" then it would stay under a square root sign and just multiply by 2a as well. The principal root of a number is only its positive root (you can understand that you are looking for the principal root from the sign in front of the radical, which is a positive one)
No. The Square root of x is not the value of x. So it can not be simplified beyond: Root X + root 3x Yes. The square root of 3x equals the square root of 3 times the square root of x, so when you add another square root of x, you can factor out the square root of x, thereby simplifying the expression to the square root of x times the sum of one plus the square root of three.
Yes, because when x equals 1, the square root of x is rational and the square root of -x is irrational, and when x equals -1, the square root of x is irrational and the square root of -x is rational.
The square root of the fifth root of x is the tenth root of x.
The fraction must be rationalized. Since it is the square root of x in the denominator, you are going to multiply the numerator and denominator by the square root of x. For simplicity of the problem, root will take the place of the symbol for square root: root(3y)/root(x) root(3y)*root(x)/root(x)*root(x) root(3xy)/x The simplified answer is going to be the square root of 3xy divided by x. Hope that helped.
4
square root of 4x is 2 times square root of x, so answer is square root of x times 3 since it is 2 square roots of x plus one of them
It seems to be 25. Call your number "x". x = 5 square root of (5 square root of (5 ...) Square it; this will eliminate the outermost square root sign: x squared = 25 times 5 square root of (5 square root of (... Dividing the second equation by the first one, you get: x squared / x = 25 x / x x = 25
Square root of 56 = Square root of (4 x 14) = (Square root of 4) x (Square root of 14) = 2 x (Square root of 14) The actual value would be 2 x 3.741 = 7.482