The square root of 1 is 1.The square root of 0 is 0.
The square root of both 0 and 1 equals the square of 0 and 1
The answer is 0.
quadratics have the form ax2+bx+c=0 the discriminant is the square root of (b2-4ac) = square root of (16-16) =square root of 0 = 0
Any number greater than 0 has two square roots, a positive square root and a corresponding negative square root. Rounded to two decimal places, the square roots of 134 are ±11.58.
The square root of 1 is 1.The square root of 0 is 0.
The square root of 0 would be 0 because 0 * 0 = 0
Sqrt(0) = 0 so the answer is 0.
The square root of 0 is 0, which is a real number.
The square root of 0 is 0. Since 0 has no positive or negative equivalent, this is its only square root.
x2+3i=0 so x2=-3i x=square root of (-3i)=square root (-3)square root (i) =i(square root(3)([1/(square root (2)](1+i) and i(square root(3)([-1/(square root (2)](1+i) You can multiply through by i if you want, but I left it since it shows you where the answer came from. Note: The square root of i is 1/square root 2(1+i) and -1/square root of 2 (1+i) to see this, try and square them!
If x is 0, the square root is 0 also.
The square root of both 0 and 1 equals the square of 0 and 1
0
The answer is 0.
sqrt(a)+sqrt(b) is different from sqrt(a+b) unless a=0 and/or b=0. *sqrt=square root of
0