Go 250 units of distance in any one direction. Turn 90 degrees clockwise and go 250 units of distance in a straight line.
Turn 90 degrees clockwise and go 250 units of distance in a straight line.
Turn 90 degrees clockwise and go 250 units of distance in a straight line.
You will have travelled along a square route whose total distance was 1000 units of distance.
Alternatively you could have turned counter clockwise each time.
No, the square root of 1000 is not rational.
If, by third square root, you mean sqrt(sqrt(sqrt(1000))) then the answer is 2.371374
1000.0
1000
You are asking for the square root. The square root of a number is a number multiplied by itself to get that number. For example, the square root of 81 is 9, because 9 X 9= 81. The square root of 1000 is not a whole number, it is 31.62 (rounded) because 31.62 x 31.62 = 1000.(31.62 is approximate. The actual number is 31.6227766)
No, the square root of 1000 is not rational.
If, by third square root, you mean sqrt(sqrt(sqrt(1000))) then the answer is 2.371374
the square root of 1000 can be written as 10 times the square root of 10.
The square root of 10^6 is 10^3, or 1000.
1000.0
None. 1000 does not have an integer square root. 312 = 961 and 322 = 1024 and there is no integer between 31 and 32 so there can be no integer whose square is 1000.
31.62
The square root of any non-perfect square is an irrational number. Since sqrt(1000) = 10 sqrt(10), it is irrational.
1000
It is 31.6228, approx.
You are asking for the square root. The square root of a number is a number multiplied by itself to get that number. For example, the square root of 81 is 9, because 9 X 9= 81. The square root of 1000 is not a whole number, it is 31.62 (rounded) because 31.62 x 31.62 = 1000.(31.62 is approximate. The actual number is 31.6227766)
i think it more than 20