10 Times Square root of 2
The square root of 200 is sq. root of 100 times 2, then the sq. root of 100 is 10 and remains the sq. root of 2.
check the answer:
square root of 2 is 1.41,
10 times 1.41 is 14.1
196 is closed enough to 200 and the square root of 196 is 14.
200 square inches are 1.39 square feet.
Do you mean a square of side 200 ft? That would be 200 x 200 = 40,000 sq ft
22.22 square yards in 200 square feet.
Not quite. 1 acre is 43,560 square feet. 200' x 200' is 40,000 square feet. That's about 91.83 percent of an acre. For a one-acre square, the sides each have to be 208feet 8.5inches.
The answer is 12.
if you mean what is square root of 200 in its simplest radical form its 10*21/2
square root of 200 = 10 * square root of 2. Also, the number 2 when multilied by 100 = 200!
200 = 2*100. Square root of 100 is 10. So, reduced form is 10 times the square root of 2.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? The square root of 80000 in radical form is 200√2. So, like, if you ever need to know the length of one side of a square with an area of 80000, you're all set.
The square root of 200 is not an integer (whole number). In rounded form, the two square roots of 200 are positive and negative 14.14214... .
√200 = 10√2. In order to simplify square roots, you find what factors of the number under the radical sign you can take the square root of. In the case of 200, its factors are 5 * 2 * 2 * 5 * 2. You can take the square root of 2 * 2 and 5 * 5, which are 2 and 5, respectively. 2 and 5 are on the outside of the radical sign, so you multiply them together to equal 10, while the remaining 2 stays under the radical.
root 200 = root 2 multiplied by root 100 root 100 = 10 root 200 = 10 root 2
sqrt(200) = sqrt(100*2) = sqrt(100)*sqrt(2) = 10*sqrt(2)
200 is a square root, of 40000.
sqrt(200) = sqrt(100 x 2) = sqrt(100) x sqrt(2) = 10 sqrt(2)
√1 = 1√4 = 2√9 = 3√16 = 4√25 = 5√36 = 6√49 = 7√64 = 8√81 = 9√100 = 10√121 = 11√144 = 12√169 = 13√196 = 14Read more: Square_root_answers_from_1_to_200
200 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.