The geometric mean of two numbers is the square root of their product. For example, the geometric mean of 4 and 25 is 10.
16. Geometric mean of two numbers is the square root of their product.
4.0
5.65685424949
4.89898
To find the ARITHMETIC mean of 4 and 10, you add them up and then divide by n number of values: (4+10)/2 = 7 To find the GEOMETRIC mean, you multiply 4 and 10, and then find the nth root: the square root of 40 is 6.32 (to 3 significant figures).
geometric mean of 4 and 25=√(4x25)=√100=10
10
The geometric mean of two numbers is the square root of their product. For example, the geometric mean of 4 and 25 is 10.
16. Geometric mean of two numbers is the square root of their product.
The geometric mean of 4 and 5 is 4.472135955
No. Geometric mean of n numbers is the nth root of the product of the n numbers. → geometric mean of 4 and 9 is √(4×9) = √36 = 6.
4.0
Geometric mean of 8 and 16 is: 11.313708498984761 Look at link: "Calculation of the geometric mean of two numbers".
The mean of the numbers a1, a2, a3, ..., an is equal to (a1 + a2 + a3 +... + an)/n. This number is also called the average or the arithmetic mean.The geometric mean of the positive numbers a1, a2, a3, ... an is the n-th roots of [(a1)(a2)(a3)...(an)]Given two positive numbers a and b, suppose that a< b. The arithmetic mean, m, is then equal to (1/2)(a + b), and, a, m, b is an arithmetic sequence. The geometric mean, g, is the square root of ab, and, a, g, b is a geometric sequence. For example, the arithmetic mean of 4 and 25 is 14.5 [(1/2)(4 + 25)], and arithmetic sequence is 4, 14.5, 25. The geometric mean of 4 and 25 is 10 (the square root of 100), and the geometric sequence is 4, 10, 25.It is a theorem of elementary algebra that, for any positive numbers a1, a2, a3, ..., an, the arithmetic mean is greater than or equal to the geometric mean. That is:(1/n)(a1, a2, a3, ..., an) ≥ n-th roots of [(a1)(a2)(a3)...(an)]
geometric mean of 14 and 24=√(14x24)=√336=4√21
+sqrt(2*5) = + sqrt(10) = 3.1623 (to 4 dp)