2i radical 5 * * * * * No. it is ± i*radical(25) which is ± 5i. Not sure why the answer is requireed in radical form.
square root of 85 is 9.2195444 but the in the simplest radical is square root of 5 times square root of 17
The square root of 14 is already in its simplest radical form. The number itself is roughly 3.7416573867739413
5 (square root) 2
2 square root 17
2i radical 5 * * * * * No. it is ± i*radical(25) which is ± 5i. Not sure why the answer is requireed in radical form.
The square root of 28 in simplified radical form is...2 * Square root of 7
easy, lets take radical negative 3 for example. you can take out a "i" because i = the radical negative one. There fore the answer is i radical 3.
The square root of 125 in radical form is 5 x (square root of 5).
square root of 85 is 9.2195444 but the in the simplest radical is square root of 5 times square root of 17
You don't. If the negative sign is outside the radical, then you take the square root of the number and apply the negative. If the negative sign is inside the radical, you will have an imaginary number.
Square root of 165
Technically,no. A radical equation has a radical (Square root) in it, and has two solutions because the square root can be positive or negative.
That IS the simplest radical form.
The square root of 14 is already in its simplest radical form. The number itself is roughly 3.7416573867739413
The square root of 252 in simplified radical form is 2√63.
The square root of 145 is in its simplest form.