whats the circumferences of r=8
A circle is not a number, it is a 2-dimensional shape. A number can have a square root, not a shape. So, a circle cannot have a square root!.
A parabola is a 2-dimensional shape. A square root is a function whose arguments are numbers. The question does not make sense.
2-butene show geomatric isomerism because each double bond carbon atom has two different group
2 square root 2
whats the circumferences of r=8
A circle is not a number, it is a 2-dimensional shape. A number can have a square root, not a shape. So, a circle cannot have a square root!.
A parabola is a 2-dimensional shape. A square root is a function whose arguments are numbers. The question does not make sense.
2-butene show geomatric isomerism because each double bond carbon atom has two different group
root 8 = root 4 x root 2 = 2 root 2, root 18 = root 9 x root 2 = 3 root 2; 2 root 2 x 3 root 2 = 6 x 2 = 12
6 root(2) = root(36) root(2) = root(36 x 2) = root(72).
2 root 2
5 root 2
Well, honey, root 2 times root 6 is the same as the square root of 12, which simplifies to 2 times the square root of 3. So, in a nutshell, root 2 times root 6 equals 2 root 3. Math can be a real hoot, can't it?
The square root of the square root of 2
I will use "root" as a symbol for square root. I assume you want to get rid of the square root in the denominator; this will usually bring some square root into the numerator.If you have the square root by itself, or as a factor, multiply numerator and denominator by this square root. Example:3 / root(2) = 3 x root(2) / root(2) x root(2) = 3 x root(2) / 2.If the square root is added or subtracted with something else, multiply with a "complement", as in the following example:1 / root(2) + 5The "complement" is the same expression, but changing the plus sign to a minus sign. Multiply numerator and denominator aby root(2) - 5:root(2) - 5 / (root(2) + 5)(root(2) - 5)= (root(2) - 5) / (2 - 25)= (root(2) - 5) / -23= -(root(2) - 5) / 23
2 square root 2