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You can use a calculator's square root function. If you want to calculate it yourself, you can try out the square of different numbers, until you get closer and closer to the target - in this case, 5184.
yes
Let's illustrate with an example. The square function takes a number as its input, and returns the square of a number. The opposite (inverse) function is the square root (input: any non-negative number; output: the square root). For example, the square of 3 is 9; the square root of 9 is 3. The idea, then, is that if you apply first a function, then its inverse, you get the original number back.
Yes, if your equation is f(x) = sqrt5(x). The square root is also a function itself, if that's what you mean.
electricians use the Square Root function when connecting 3 way outlets with the electral current of an intel processor.