Yes. The square root of 49 is 7.
Yes although it is an irrational number
Nothing. You cannot have a square root of a negative number. The square root of negative one is called i, but i is an imaginary number. It does not exist and does not follow the properties of real numbers. (For example, if a and b are positive, then the square root of a times the square root of b is the square root of ab. But the square root of -7 is not the square root of 7 times i.)
no, 28 has no whole square root; the square root of 49 is 7
the square root of 49 equals 7
The square root of seven is a real number, but it is not a whole number.
Well, first let's define a "real number." A real number is any number that's not imaginary. It can be rational or irrational. The square root of 7 is 2.64575131... and it goes on forever. This means it cannot be written as a simple fraction. We can give an estimate of the square root of 7 in a fraction form, but this is not the exact result. So, the square root of 7 is a irrational number.Since a real number can be irrational or rational, yes, the square root of 7 is a real number.
Yes. The square root of 49 is 7.
Yes.
Yes although it is an irrational number
Nothing. You cannot have a square root of a negative number. The square root of negative one is called i, but i is an imaginary number. It does not exist and does not follow the properties of real numbers. (For example, if a and b are positive, then the square root of a times the square root of b is the square root of ab. But the square root of -7 is not the square root of 7 times i.)
no, 28 has no whole square root; the square root of 49 is 7
A square root is a number that is multiplied by itself to get the number here's an example. 7 is the square root of 49 (7*7=49)
The square root of 49 is 7 or -7.
the square root of 49 equals 7
It is: the square root of 7 times the square root of 7 = 7
I am not sure what you want to calculate; anyway, the square root of a negative number is a complex number: in this case, "i" multiplied by the square root of 7. The remaining calculations will also result in complex numbers. When you calculate points, you usually want a real number, not a complex number.