The square root of 30 is approximately 5.477. Rounding this to the nearest integer, we get 5.
To the nearest integer, 28 To the nearest ten, 30
To the nearest integer, 35 To the nearest ten, 30
The square root of 30 is: ± 5.477226
√15/√30 = √(15/30) = √(1/2)
The square root of 30, denoted as √30, is an irrational number because it cannot be expressed as a fraction of two integers. Its decimal expansion is approximately 5.477, which goes on forever without repeating. The rationale behind its classification as irrational lies in the fact that 30 is not a perfect square, meaning there is no integer that, when multiplied by itself, equals 30. Thus, √30 is often left in its radical form for exactness in mathematical expressions.
The square root of 30 to the nearest hundredth is: ± 5.48
30 is not a perfect square. Its square root is a fraction and the square root of a perfect square is always an integer.
To the nearest hundred √30 = 0To the nearest hundredTH √30= 5.48
30.00
30.0
No. You don't get an integer if you take the square root of 30. By way of example, 25 (5x5) is a square number, as is 36 (6x6).
Yes. √900 = √(9 × 100) = √9 × √100 = 3 × 10 = 30
i square root(30) = 5.47722558 i
To the nearest integer, 28 To the nearest ten, 30
To the nearest integer, 31 To the nearest ten, 30
To the nearest integer, 35 To the nearest ten, 30
To the nearest integer, 26 To the nearest ten, 30