4
You find the same two numbers that make the number, then you use one of those numbers for your square root.
You can. Just add the numbers together, and find their square root. One plus three is four; the square root of the sum is two.
The attribute that they have one square root which belongs to the set of natural numbers.
Yes. Irrational numbers are found by getting the square root of a negative number.
4
You find the same two numbers that make the number, then you use one of those numbers for your square root.
You can. Just add the numbers together, and find their square root. One plus three is four; the square root of the sum is two.
The attribute that they have one square root which belongs to the set of natural numbers.
yes
Yes. Irrational numbers are found by getting the square root of a negative number.
Yes and no. It depends on your definition of square root. By the actual one, yes. All non-negative numbers have a square root. That square root might be irrational but it has a square root, nonetheless. 10 isn't a square number because there's no integer that can be squared to make ten but 10 definitely has a square root: 3.16227766....... If by square root you mean an integer square root, then no. If a number has an integer as its square root then you could square that integer to get the number, making it a square number.
The square root of zero is zero and the square root of one is one. No other real numbers have square roots equal to themselves. In other words, the solution set to x=x2 is {0,1}
-2pie
i stands for the square root of negative one.
Absolutely not. A square number has an integer square root, so by definition it has at least one factor. Prime numbers have no factors
yes. Examples: the square root of 7 times the square root of 7 = 7 the square root of 7 times one over the square root of 7 = 1