If "a" is positive,
it will have two fourth roots, one will be positive and one will be negative
it will have one fifth root, which will be positive.
If "a" is negative,
it will have one fourth root, which will be negative.
it will have one fifth root, which will be negative.
It does not come out as a whole number but it's 4.242640678
2 and -2.
The real ones are -5 and +5.
there are no real answers to an even root (2,4,6,8) of any negative number. the innovation of i allows you to find the unreal answers. i= the fourth root of positive 16 is 2. so, the roots of -16 are positive and negative 2i. post script: you cannot have a real even root of a negative because a negative multiplied by a negative turns into a positive.
No real roots
Fourth roots are the inverse operation of raising a number to the fourth power. For a given number, the fourth root is a number that, when raised to the fourth power, equals the original number. For example, the fourth root of 16 is 2, since 2^4 = 16. In mathematical notation, the fourth root of a number x is denoted as √√x or x^(1/4).
To find the fifth roots of 4 + 3i, first convert the number to polar form: 4 + 3i = 5∠36.87°. Then, to find the fifth roots, divide the angle by 5: 36.87° / 5 = 7.374°. The fifth roots in polar form are 5∠7.374°, 5∠67.374°, 5∠127.374°, 5∠187.374°, and 5∠247.374°.
There are 3 cube roots of 27. There are 2 square roots of 27 ( or any real number ). There are 4 fourth roots of 27 and so on:)
There is an infinite amount of roots. You can have a square root, a cube root, a fourth root, a fifth root, and so on. The answer will slowly get smaller, but there is still a number that multiplies two times, three times, four times, five times, etc. of itself to get a number.
It does not come out as a whole number but it's 4.242640678
There are no roots - fourth or otherwise - of 1 plus me!
The fourth square root is the 16th root of a number. On a computer, to find the 16th root of a number, say 5.6, enter 5.6^(1/16). If the number you start with is positive, you will have 2 real roots (one positive and one negative) and 14 complex roots. If it is negative, you will have 16 complex roots.
The real fourth roots are -0.3 and 0.3
Usually four. As a simple example, the fourth roots of 1 are: 1, -1, i, -i.
In general, the answer is 4, but only 2 of them are real. For example, the 4th roots of 16 are 2, -2, 2i, and -2i.
The answer will depend on the form of the fourth root. Positive real numbers will have two fourth roots which are real and two that are complex. Complex numbers will have four complex roots. However, none of these can be "simplified" in the normal sense of the term.
There are none. Negative numbers don't have square roots. Well, they do, but they are known as imaginary numbers, and there is no way to determine them. A square root of a number is a number you can multiply by itself and get the original number. There is no number you can multiply by itself to get a negative number, but every positive number has two square roots of the same absolute value.