Yes.
"Radical x times radical x" could be interpreted as the square root of x times the square root of x - in which case the product would be x (the number under the radical sign)
Square both sides of the equation to get rid of the radical sign. Then just solve as you normally would. Good luck! :-)
There is two ways to interpret "5 radical sign'. It can either mean: five times the square root of 800 leading to: √(5 × √800) ≈ 11.8921 or, if the five is small and raised slightly it is the fifth root of 800 and it leads to: √(fifth_root(800)) = (800^(1/5))^(1/2) = 800^(1/10) ≈ 1.9512
it's called the radical sign
The number under the radical sign (also known as the radical) is called the radican.
A number under a radical sign is known as a radicand.
the radical is the thing that houses the number in the problem of a square root. A radical sign looks like a division house just with a tail on the front of it.
False
before
the number under the radical sign is called the radicand
a surd . i suspect
A small number at the upper left of a radical sign means, what root you want to take. If there is no number, the number "2" is assumed (square root), meaning, "What number must I reais to the power 2, to get the number in the radical sign?" For example, the square root (or 2nd. root) of 100 is 10, since 10 to the power 2 = 100. As another example, the cubic root (3rd. root) of 125 is 5, since 5 to the power 3 = 125.
you have to square the outside number and then multiply it by the number inside the squareroot sign.
Get a calculator with the radical sign, press on whatever number you want to square root, and then press on the radical sign.
If you mean the small number, it is a power.
Not necessarily. If it is the same radical number, then the signs cancel out. Radical 5 times radical 5 equals 5. But if they are different, then you multiply the numbers and leave them under the radical sign. Example: radical 5 * radical 6 = radical 30