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.
Odd
negative
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 'radical': √
You cannot factor negative radical numbers because the square of a number must always be positive. A negative number multiplied by a negative number produces a positive number. So, it is impossible to have a negative radical.
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.
Odd
negative
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 'radical': √
easy, lets take radical negative 3 for example. you can take out a "i" because i = the radical negative one. There fore the answer is i radical 3.
Negative square root is -√Square root of negative one is i.
Tin ions are positive (cations).
2i radical 5 * * * * * No. it is ± i*radical(25) which is ± 5i. Not sure why the answer is requireed in radical form.
the letter i means a complex number. it means square root of -1. whenever you have numbers outside the radical all you have to do is square them to get them inside the radical.so square i and square 2i2 radical 20 is the same are your new form... radical negative 80but your numerical answer is 8.94i
It depends what power is associated with the radical.