![Square root](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8zLzNlL051dm9sYV9hcHBzX2VkdV9tYXRoZW1hdGljc19ibHVlLXAuc3ZnLzE2MDBweC1OdXZvbGFfYXBwc19lZHVfbWF0aGVtYXRpY3NfYmx1ZS1wLnN2Zy5wbmc=.png )
In mathematics, a square root of a number x is a number y such that ; in other words, a number y whose square (the result of multiplying the number by itself, or ) is x. For example, 4 and −4 are square roots of 16 because .
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHpMek5sTDA1MWRtOXNZVjloY0hCelgyVmtkVjl0WVhSb1pXMWhkR2xqYzE5aWJIVmxMWEF1YzNabkx6RTJPSEI0TFU1MWRtOXNZVjloY0hCelgyVmtkVjl0WVhSb1pXMWhkR2xqYzE5aWJIVmxMWEF1YzNabkxuQnVadz09LnBuZw==.png)
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Every nonnegative real number x has a unique nonnegative square root, called the principal square root or simply the square root (with a definite article, see below), which is denoted by where the symbol "" is called the radical sign or radix. For example, to express the fact that the principal square root of 9 is 3, we write . The term (or number) whose square root is being considered is known as the radicand. The radicand is the number or expression underneath the radical sign, in this case, 9. For non-negative x, the principal square root can also be written in exponent notation, as .
Every positive number x has two square roots: (which is positive) and (which is negative). The two roots can be written more concisely using the ± sign as . Although the principal square root of a positive number is only one of its two square roots, the designation "the square root" is often used to refer to the principal square root.
Square roots of negative numbers can be discussed within the framework of complex numbers. More generally, square roots can be considered in any context in which a notion of the "square" of a mathematical object is defined. These include function spaces and square matrices, among other mathematical structures.
History
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The Yale Babylonian Collection clay tablet YBC 7289 was created between 1800 BC and 1600 BC, showing and
respectively as 1;24,51,10 and 0;42,25,35 base 60 numbers on a square crossed by two diagonals. (1;24,51,10) base 60 corresponds to 1.41421296, which is correct to 5 decimal places (1.41421356...).
The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus is a copy from 1650 BC of an earlier Berlin Papyrus and other texts – possibly the Kahun Papyrus – that shows how the Egyptians extracted square roots by an inverse proportion method.
In Ancient India, the knowledge of theoretical and applied aspects of square and square root was at least as old as the Sulba Sutras, dated around 800–500 BC (possibly much earlier). A method for finding very good approximations to the square roots of 2 and 3 are given in the Baudhayana Sulba Sutra.Apastamba who was dated around 600 BCE has given a strikingly accurate value for which is correct up to five decimal places as
.Aryabhata, in the Aryabhatiya (section 2.4), has given a method for finding the square root of numbers having many digits.
It was known to the ancient Greeks that square roots of positive integers that are not perfect squares are always irrational numbers: numbers not expressible as a ratio of two integers (that is, they cannot be written exactly as , where m and n are integers). This is the theorem Euclid X, 9, almost certainly due to Theaetetus dating back to c. 380 BC. The discovery of irrational numbers, including the particular case of the square root of 2, is widely associated with the Pythagorean school. Although some accounts attribute the discovery to Hippasus, the specific contributor remains uncertain due to the scarcity of primary sources and the secretive nature of the brotherhood. It is exactly the length of the diagonal of a square with side length 1.
In the Chinese mathematical work Writings on Reckoning, written between 202 BC and 186 BC during the early Han dynasty, the square root is approximated by using an "excess and deficiency" method, which says to "...combine the excess and deficiency as the divisor; (taking) the deficiency numerator multiplied by the excess denominator and the excess numerator times the deficiency denominator, combine them as the dividend."
A symbol for square roots, written as an elaborate R, was invented by Regiomontanus (1436–1476). An R was also used for radix to indicate square roots in Gerolamo Cardano's Ars Magna.
According to historian of mathematics D.E. Smith, Aryabhata's method for finding the square root was first introduced in Europe by Cataneo—in 1546.
According to Jeffrey A. Oaks, Arabs used the letter jīm/ĝīm (ج), the first letter of the word "جذر" (variously transliterated as jaḏr, jiḏr, ǧaḏr or ǧiḏr, "root"), placed in its initial form (ﺟ) over a number to indicate its square root. The letter jīm resembles the present square root shape. Its usage goes as far as the end of the twelfth century in the works of the Moroccan mathematician Ibn al-Yasamin.
The symbol "√" for the square root was first used in print in 1525, in Christoph Rudolff's Coss.
Properties and uses
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The principal square root function (usually just referred to as the "square root function") is a function that maps the set of nonnegative real numbers onto itself. In geometrical terms, the square root function maps the area of a square to its side length.
The square root of x is rational if and only if x is a rational number that can be represented as a ratio of two perfect squares. (See square root of 2 for proofs that this is an irrational number, and quadratic irrational for a proof for all non-square natural numbers.) The square root function maps rational numbers into algebraic numbers, the latter being a superset of the rational numbers).
For all real numbers x, (see absolute value).
For all nonnegative real numbers x and y, and
The square root function is continuous for all nonnegative x, and differentiable for all positive x. If f denotes the square root function, whose derivative is given by:
The Taylor series of about x = 0 converges for |x| ≤ 1, and is given by
The square root of a nonnegative number is used in the definition of Euclidean norm (and distance), as well as in generalizations such as Hilbert spaces. It defines an important concept of standard deviation used in probability theory and statistics. It has a major use in the formula for solutions of a quadratic equation. Quadratic fields and rings of quadratic integers, which are based on square roots, are important in algebra and have uses in geometry. Square roots frequently appear in mathematical formulas elsewhere, as well as in many physical laws.
Square roots of positive integers
A positive number has two square roots, one positive, and one negative, which are opposite to each other. When talking of the square root of a positive integer, it is usually the positive square root that is meant.
The square roots of an integer are algebraic integers—more specifically quadratic integers.
The square root of a positive integer is the product of the roots of its prime factors, because the square root of a product is the product of the square roots of the factors. Since only roots of those primes having an odd power in the factorization are necessary. More precisely, the square root of a prime factorization is
As decimal expansions
The square roots of the perfect squares (e.g., 0, 1, 4, 9, 16) are integers. In all other cases, the square roots of positive integers are irrational numbers, and hence have non-repeating decimals in their decimal representations. Decimal approximations of the square roots of the first few natural numbers are given in the following table.
n | |
---|---|
0 | 0 |
1 | 1 |
2 | 1.41421356237309504880168872420969807856967187537694 |
3 | 1.73205080756887729352744634150587236694280525381038 |
4 | 2 |
5 | 2.23606797749978969640917366873127623544061835961152 |
6 | 2.44948974278317809819728407470589139196594748065667 |
7 | 2.64575131106459059050161575363926042571025918308245 |
8 | 2.82842712474619009760337744841939615713934375075389 |
9 | 3 |
10 | 3.16227766016837933199889354443271853371955513932521 |
As expansions in other numeral systems
As with before, the square roots of the perfect squares (e.g., 0, 1, 4, 9, 16) are integers. In all other cases, the square roots of positive integers are irrational numbers, and therefore have non-repeating digits in any standard positional notation system.
The square roots of small integers are used in both the SHA-1 and SHA-2 hash function designs to provide nothing up my sleeve numbers.
As periodic continued fractions
A result from the study of irrational numbers as simple continued fractions was obtained by Joseph Louis Lagrange c. 1780. Lagrange found that the representation of the square root of any non-square positive integer as a continued fraction is periodic. That is, a certain pattern of partial denominators repeats indefinitely in the continued fraction. In a sense these square roots are the very simplest irrational numbers, because they can be represented with a simple repeating pattern of integers.
= [1; 2, 2, ...] | |
= [1; 1, 2, 1, 2, ...] | |
= [2] | |
= [2; 4, 4, ...] | |
= [2; 2, 4, 2, 4, ...] | |
= [2; 1, 1, 1, 4, 1, 1, 1, 4, ...] | |
= [2; 1, 4, 1, 4, ...] | |
= [3] | |
= [3; 6, 6, ...] | |
= [3; 3, 6, 3, 6, ...] | |
= [3; 2, 6, 2, 6, ...] | |
= [3; 1, 1, 1, 1, 6, 1, 1, 1, 1, 6, ...] | |
= [3; 1, 2, 1, 6, 1, 2, 1, 6, ...] | |
= [3; 1, 6, 1, 6, ...] | |
= [4] | |
= [4; 8, 8, ...] | |
= [4; 4, 8, 4, 8, ...] | |
= [4; 2, 1, 3, 1, 2, 8, 2, 1, 3, 1, 2, 8, ...] | |
= [4; 2, 8, 2, 8, ...] |
The square bracket notation used above is a short form for a continued fraction. Written in the more suggestive algebraic form, the simple continued fraction for the square root of 11, [3; 3, 6, 3, 6, ...], looks like this:
where the two-digit pattern {3, 6} repeats over and over again in the partial denominators. Since 11 = 32 + 2, the above is also identical to the following generalized continued fractions:
Computation
Square roots of positive numbers are not in general rational numbers, and so cannot be written as a terminating or recurring decimal expression. Therefore in general any attempt to compute a square root expressed in decimal form can only yield an approximation, though a sequence of increasingly accurate approximations can be obtained.
Most pocket calculators have a square root key. Computer spreadsheets and other software are also frequently used to calculate square roots. Pocket calculators typically implement efficient routines, such as the Newton's method (frequently with an initial guess of 1), to compute the square root of a positive real number. When computing square roots with logarithm tables or slide rules, one can exploit the identities where ln and log10 are the natural and base-10 logarithms.
By trial-and-error, one can square an estimate for and raise or lower the estimate until it agrees to sufficient accuracy. For this technique it is prudent to use the identity
as it allows one to adjust the estimate x by some amount c and measure the square of the adjustment in terms of the original estimate and its square.
The most common iterative method of square root calculation by hand is known as the "Babylonian method" or "Heron's method" after the first-century Greek philosopher Heron of Alexandria, who first described it. The method uses the same iterative scheme as the Newton–Raphson method yields when applied to the function y = f(x) = x2 − a, using the fact that its slope at any point is dy/dx = f′(x) = 2x, but predates it by many centuries. The algorithm is to repeat a simple calculation that results in a number closer to the actual square root each time it is repeated with its result as the new input. The motivation is that if x is an overestimate to the square root of a nonnegative real number a then a/x will be an underestimate and so the average of these two numbers is a better approximation than either of them. However, the inequality of arithmetic and geometric means shows this average is always an overestimate of the square root (as noted below), and so it can serve as a new overestimate with which to repeat the process, which converges as a consequence of the successive overestimates and underestimates being closer to each other after each iteration. To find x:
- Start with an arbitrary positive start value x. The closer to the square root of a, the fewer the iterations that will be needed to achieve the desired precision.
- Replace x by the average (x + a/x) / 2 between x and a/x.
- Repeat from step 2, using this average as the new value of x.
That is, if an arbitrary guess for is x0, and xn + 1 = (xn + a/xn) / 2, then each xn is an approximation of
which is better for large n than for small n. If a is positive, the convergence is quadratic, which means that in approaching the limit, the number of correct digits roughly doubles in each next iteration. If a = 0, the convergence is only linear; however,
so in this case no iteration is needed.
Using the identity the computation of the square root of a positive number can be reduced to that of a number in the range [1, 4). This simplifies finding a start value for the iterative method that is close to the square root, for which a polynomial or piecewise-linear approximation can be used.
The time complexity for computing a square root with n digits of precision is equivalent to that of multiplying two n-digit numbers.
Another useful method for calculating the square root is the shifting nth root algorithm, applied for n = 2.
The name of the square root function varies from programming language to programming language, with sqrt
(often pronounced "squirt") being common, used in C and derived languages such as C++, JavaScript, PHP, and Python.
Square roots of negative and complex numbers
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWxMMlV5TDBOdmJYQnNaWGhmYzNGeWRGOXNaV0ZtTVM1cWNHY3ZNakF3Y0hndFEyOXRjR3hsZUY5emNYSjBYMnhsWVdZeExtcHdadz09LmpwZw==.jpg)
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The square of any positive or negative number is positive, and the square of 0 is 0. Therefore, no negative number can have a real square root. However, it is possible to work with a more inclusive set of numbers, called the complex numbers, that does contain solutions to the square root of a negative number. This is done by introducing a new number, denoted by i (sometimes by j, especially in the context of electricity where i traditionally represents electric current) and called the imaginary unit, which is defined such that i2 = −1. Using this notation, we can think of i as the square root of −1, but we also have (−i)2 = i2 = −1 and so −i is also a square root of −1. By convention, the principal square root of −1 is i, or more generally, if x is any nonnegative number, then the principal square root of −x is
The right side (as well as its negative) is indeed a square root of −x, since
For every non-zero complex number z there exist precisely two numbers w such that w2 = z: the principal square root of z (defined below), and its negative.
Principal square root of a complex number
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWhMMkZoTDFacGMzVmhiR2x6WVhScGIyNWZZMjl0Y0d4bGVGOXVkVzFpWlhKZmNtOXZkSE11YzNabkx6STFNSEI0TFZacGMzVmhiR2x6WVhScGIyNWZZMjl0Y0d4bGVGOXVkVzFpWlhKZmNtOXZkSE11YzNabkxuQnVadz09LnBuZw==.png)
To find a definition for the square root that allows us to consistently choose a single value, called the principal value, we start by observing that any complex number can be viewed as a point in the plane,
expressed using Cartesian coordinates. The same point may be reinterpreted using polar coordinates as the pair
where
is the distance of the point from the origin, and
is the angle that the line from the origin to the point makes with the positive real (
) axis. In complex analysis, the location of this point is conventionally written
If
then the principal square root of
is defined to be the following:
The principal square root function is thus defined using the non-positive real axis as a branch cut. If
is a non-negative real number (which happens if and only if
) then the principal square root of
is
in other words, the principal square root of a non-negative real number is just the usual non-negative square root. It is important that
because if, for example,
(so
) then the principal square root is
but using
would instead produce the other square root
The principal square root function is holomorphic everywhere except on the set of non-positive real numbers (on strictly negative reals it is not even continuous). The above Taylor series for remains valid for complex numbers
with
The above can also be expressed in terms of trigonometric functions:
Algebraic formula
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHpMek15TDBsdFlXZHBibUZ5ZVRKU2IyOTBMbk4yWnk4eU1qQndlQzFKYldGbmFXNWhjbmt5VW05dmRDNXpkbWN1Y0c1bi5wbmc=.png)
When the number is expressed using its real and imaginary parts, the following formula can be used for the principal square root:
where sgn(y) = 1 if y ≥ 0 and sgn(y) = −1 otherwise. In particular, the imaginary parts of the original number and the principal value of its square root have the same sign. The real part of the principal value of the square root is always nonnegative.
For example, the principal square roots of ±i are given by:
Notes
In the following, the complex z and w may be expressed as:
where and
.
Because of the discontinuous nature of the square root function in the complex plane, the following laws are not true in general.
Counterexample for the principal square root: z = −1 and w = −1 This equality is valid only when
Counterexample for the principal square root: w = 1 and z = −1 This equality is valid only when
Counterexample for the principal square root: z = −1) This equality is valid only when
A similar problem appears with other complex functions with branch cuts, e.g., the complex logarithm and the relations logz + logw = log(zw) or log(z*) = log(z)* which are not true in general.
Wrongly assuming one of these laws underlies several faulty "proofs", for instance the following one showing that −1 = 1:
The third equality cannot be justified (see invalid proof).: Chapter VI, Section I, Subsection 2 The fallacy that +1 = -1 It can be made to hold by changing the meaning of √ so that this no longer represents the principal square root (see above) but selects a branch for the square root that contains The left-hand side becomes either
if the branch includes +i or
if the branch includes −i, while the right-hand side becomes
where the last equality,
is a consequence of the choice of branch in the redefinition of √.
nth roots and polynomial roots
The definition of a square root of as a number
such that
has been generalized in the following way.
A cube root of is a number
such that
; it is denoted
If n is an integer greater than two, a n-th root of is a number
such that
; it is denoted
Given any polynomial p, a root of p is a number y such that p(y) = 0. For example, the nth roots of x are the roots of the polynomial (in y)
Abel–Ruffini theorem states that, in general, the roots of a polynomial of degree five or higher cannot be expressed in terms of nth roots.
Square roots of matrices and operators
If A is a positive-definite matrix or operator, then there exists precisely one positive definite matrix or operator B with B2 = A; we then define A1/2 = B. In general matrices may have multiple square roots or even an infinitude of them. For example, the 2 × 2 identity matrix has an infinity of square roots, though only one of them is positive definite.
In integral domains, including fields
Each element of an integral domain has no more than 2 square roots. The difference of two squares identity u2 − v2 = (u − v)(u + v) is proved using the commutativity of multiplication. If u and v are square roots of the same element, then u2 − v2 = 0. Because there are no zero divisors this implies u = v or u + v = 0, where the latter means that two roots are additive inverses of each other. In other words if an element a square root u of an element a exists, then the only square roots of a are u and −u. The only square root of 0 in an integral domain is 0 itself.
In a field of characteristic 2, an element either has one square root or does not have any at all, because each element is its own additive inverse, so that −u = u. If the field is finite of characteristic 2 then every element has a unique square root. In a field of any other characteristic, any non-zero element either has two square roots, as explained above, or does not have any.
Given an odd prime number p, let q = pe for some positive integer e. A non-zero element of the field Fq with q elements is a quadratic residue if it has a square root in Fq. Otherwise, it is a quadratic non-residue. There are (q − 1)/2 quadratic residues and (q − 1)/2 quadratic non-residues; zero is not counted in either class. The quadratic residues form a group under multiplication. The properties of quadratic residues are widely used in number theory.
In rings in general
Unlike in an integral domain, a square root in an arbitrary (unital) ring need not be unique up to sign. For example, in the ring of integers modulo 8 (which is commutative, but has zero divisors), the element 1 has four distinct square roots: ±1 and ±3.
Another example is provided by the ring of quaternions which has no zero divisors, but is not commutative. Here, the element −1 has infinitely many square roots, including ±i, ±j, and ±k. In fact, the set of square roots of −1 is exactly
A square root of 0 is either 0 or a zero divisor. Thus in rings where zero divisors do not exist, it is uniquely 0. However, rings with zero divisors may have multiple square roots of 0. For example, in any multiple of n is a square root of 0.
Geometric construction of the square root
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHdMekEzTDFOeGNuUkhaVzl0TG1kcFppOHlNakJ3ZUMxVGNYSjBSMlZ2YlM1bmFXWT0uZ2lm.gif)
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![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk0yTDFKdmIzUmZjbVZqZEdGdVoyeGxjMTlJWVcxaWFXUm5aVjh4T1RJd0xuQnVaeTh5TWpCd2VDMVNiMjkwWDNKbFkzUmhibWRzWlhOZlNHRnRZbWxrWjJWZk1Ua3lNQzV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
The square root of a positive number is usually defined as the side length of a square with the area equal to the given number. But the square shape is not necessary for it: if one of two similar planar Euclidean objects has the area a times greater than another, then the ratio of their linear sizes is .
A square root can be constructed with a compass and straightedge. In his Elements, Euclid (fl. 300 BC) gave the construction of the geometric mean of two quantities in two different places: Proposition II.14 and Proposition VI.13. Since the geometric mean of a and b is , one can construct
simply by taking b = 1.
The construction is also given by Descartes in his La Géométrie, see figure 2 on page 2. However, Descartes made no claim to originality and his audience would have been quite familiar with Euclid.
Euclid's second proof in Book VI depends on the theory of similar triangles. Let AHB be a line segment of length a + b with AH = a and HB = b. Construct the circle with AB as diameter and let C be one of the two intersections of the perpendicular chord at H with the circle and denote the length CH as h. Then, using Thales' theorem and, as in the proof of Pythagoras' theorem by similar triangles, triangle AHC is similar to triangle CHB (as indeed both are to triangle ACB, though we don't need that, but it is the essence of the proof of Pythagoras' theorem) so that AH:CH is as HC:HB, i.e. a/h = h/b, from which we conclude by cross-multiplication that h2 = ab, and finally that . When marking the midpoint O of the line segment AB and drawing the radius OC of length (a + b)/2, then clearly OC > CH, i.e.
(with equality if and only if a = b), which is the arithmetic–geometric mean inequality for two variables and, as noted above, is the basis of the Ancient Greek understanding of "Heron's method".
Another method of geometric construction uses right triangles and induction: can be constructed, and once
has been constructed, the right triangle with legs 1 and
has a hypotenuse of
. Constructing successive square roots in this manner yields the Spiral of Theodorus depicted above.
See also
Notes
- Gel'fand, p. 120 Archived 2016-09-02 at the Wayback Machine
- "Squares and Square Roots". www.mathsisfun.com. Retrieved 2020-08-28.
- Zill, Dennis G.; Shanahan, Patrick (2008). A First Course in Complex Analysis With Applications (2nd ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-7637-5772-4. Archived from the original on 2016-09-01. Extract of page 78 Archived 2016-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Square Root". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-28.
- "Analysis of YBC 7289". ubc.ca. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
- Anglin, W.S. (1994). Mathematics: A Concise History and Philosophy. New York: Springer-Verlag.
- Seidenberg, A. (1961). "The ritual origin of geometry". Archive for History of Exact Sciences. 1 (5): 488–527. doi:10.1007/bf00327767. ISSN 0003-9519. S2CID 119992603.
Seidenberg (pp. 501-505) proposes: "It is the distinction between use and origin." [By analogy] "KEPLER needed the ellipse to describe the paths of the planets around the sun; he did not, however invent the ellipse, but made use of a curve that had been lying around for nearly 2000 years". In this manner Seidenberg argues: "Although the date of a manuscript or text cannot give us the age of the practices it discloses, nonetheless the evidence is contained in manuscripts." Seidenberg quotes Thibaut from 1875: "Regarding the time in which the Sulvasutras may have been composed, it is impossible to give more accurate information than we are able to give about the date of the Kalpasutras. But whatever the period may have been during which Kalpasutras and Sulvasutras were composed in the form now before us, we must keep in view that they only give a systematically arranged description of sacrificial rites, which had been practiced during long preceding ages." Lastly, Seidenberg summarizes: "In 1899, THIBAUT ventured to assign the fourth or the third centuries B.C. as the latest possible date for the composition of the Sulvasutras (it being understood that this refers to a codification of far older material)."
- Joseph, ch.8.
- Dutta, Bibhutibhusan (1931). "On the Origin of the Hindu Terms for "Root"". The American Mathematical Monthly. 38 (7): 371–376. doi:10.2307/2300909. JSTOR 2300909. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
- Cynthia J. Huffman; Scott V. Thuong (2015). "Ancient Indian Rope Geometry in the Classroom - Approximating the Square Root of 2". www.maa.org. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
Increase the measure by its third and this third by its own fourth, less the thirty-fourth part of that fourth. This is the value with a special quantity in excess.
- J J O'Connor; E F Robertson (November 2020). "Apastamba". www.mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk. School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
- Heath, Sir Thomas L. (1908). The Thirteen Books of The Elements, Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 3.
- Craig Smorynski (2007). History of Mathematics: A Supplement (illustrated, annotated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-387-75480-2. Extract of page 49
- Brian E. Blank; Steven George Krantz (2006). Calculus: Single Variable, Volume 1 (illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-931914-59-8. Extract of page 71
- Boyer, Carl B.; Merzbach, Uta C. (2011). A History of Mathematics (3rd ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 51–53. ISBN 978-0470525487.
- Stillwell, John (2010). Mathematics and Its History (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Springer. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-1441960528.
- Dauben (2007), p. 210.
- "The Development of Algebra - 2". maths.org. Archived from the original on 24 November 2014. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
- Oaks, Jeffrey A. (2012). Algebraic Symbolism in Medieval Arabic Algebra (PDF) (Thesis). Philosophica. p. 36. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-12-03.
- Manguel, Alberto (2006). "Done on paper: the dual nature of numbers and the page". The Life of Numbers. Taric, S.A. ISBN 84-86882-14-1.
- Parkhurst, David F. (2006). Introduction to Applied Mathematics for Environmental Science. Springer. pp. 241. ISBN 9780387342283.
- Solow, Anita E. (1993). Learning by Discovery: A Lab Manual for Calculus. Cambridge University Press. pp. 48. ISBN 9780883850831.
- Aitken, Mike; Broadhurst, Bill; Hladky, Stephen (2009). Mathematics for Biological Scientists. Garland Science. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-136-84393-8. Archived from the original on 2017-03-01. Extract of page 41 Archived 2017-03-01 at the Wayback Machine
- Heath, Sir Thomas L. (1921). A History of Greek Mathematics, Vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 323–324.
- Muller, Jean-Mic (2006). Elementary functions: algorithms and implementation. Springer. pp. 92–93. ISBN 0-8176-4372-9., Chapter 5, p 92 Archived 2016-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
- "Function sqrt". CPlusPlus.com. The C++ Resources Network. 2016. Archived from the original on November 22, 2012. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
- Overland, Brian (2013). C++ for the Impatient. Addison-Wesley. p. 338. ISBN 9780133257120. OCLC 850705706. Archived from the original on September 1, 2016. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
- Abramowitz, Milton; Stegun, Irene A. (1964). Handbook of mathematical functions with formulas, graphs, and mathematical tables. Courier Dover Publications. p. 17. ISBN 0-486-61272-4. Archived from the original on 2016-04-23., Section 3.7.27, p. 17 Archived 2009-09-10 at the Wayback Machine
- Cooke, Roger (2008). Classical algebra: its nature, origins, and uses. John Wiley and Sons. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-470-25952-8. Archived from the original on 2016-04-23.
- This sign function differs from the usual sign function by its value at 0.
- Maxwell, E. A. (1959). Fallacies in Mathematics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511569739.
- Mitchell, Douglas W., "Using Pythagorean triples to generate square roots of I2", Mathematical Gazette 87, November 2003, 499–500.
References
- Dauben, Joseph W. (2007). "Chinese Mathematics I". In Katz, Victor J. (ed.). The Mathematics of Egypt, Mesopotamia, China, India, and Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11485-9.
- Gel'fand, Izrael M.; Shen, Alexander (1993). Algebra (3rd ed.). Birkhäuser. p. 120. ISBN 0-8176-3677-3.
- Joseph, George (2000). The Crest of the Peacock. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00659-8.
- Smith, David (1958). History of Mathematics. Vol. 2. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-20430-7.
- Selin, Helaine (2008), Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures, Springer, Bibcode:2008ehst.book.....S, ISBN 978-1-4020-4559-2.
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4MFlTOURiMjF0YjI1ekxXeHZaMjh1YzNabkx6TXdjSGd0UTI5dGJXOXVjeTFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Algorithms, implementations, and more – Paul Hsieh's square roots webpage
- How to manually find a square root
- AMS Featured Column, Galileo's Arithmetic by Tony Philips – includes a section on how Galileo found square roots
In mathematics a square root of a number x is a number y such that y2 x displaystyle y 2 x in other words a number y whose square the result of multiplying the number by itself or y y displaystyle y cdot y is x For example 4 and 4 are square roots of 16 because 42 4 2 16 displaystyle 4 2 4 2 16 Notation for the principal square root of x For example 25 5 since 25 5 5 or 52 5 squared Every nonnegative real number x has a unique nonnegative square root called the principal square root or simply the square root with a definite article see below which is denoted by x displaystyle sqrt x where the symbol displaystyle sqrt is called the radical sign or radix For example to express the fact that the principal square root of 9 is 3 we write 9 3 displaystyle sqrt 9 3 The term or number whose square root is being considered is known as the radicand The radicand is the number or expression underneath the radical sign in this case 9 For non negative x the principal square root can also be written in exponent notation as x1 2 displaystyle x 1 2 Every positive number x has two square roots x displaystyle sqrt x which is positive and x displaystyle sqrt x which is negative The two roots can be written more concisely using the sign as x displaystyle pm sqrt x Although the principal square root of a positive number is only one of its two square roots the designation the square root is often used to refer to the principal square root Square roots of negative numbers can be discussed within the framework of complex numbers More generally square roots can be considered in any context in which a notion of the square of a mathematical object is defined These include function spaces and square matrices among other mathematical structures HistoryYBC 7289 clay tablet The Yale Babylonian Collection clay tablet YBC 7289 was created between 1800 BC and 1600 BC showing 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 and 22 12 textstyle frac sqrt 2 2 frac 1 sqrt 2 respectively as 1 24 51 10 and 0 42 25 35 base 60 numbers on a square crossed by two diagonals 1 24 51 10 base 60 corresponds to 1 41421296 which is correct to 5 decimal places 1 41421356 The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus is a copy from 1650 BC of an earlier Berlin Papyrus and other texts possibly the Kahun Papyrus that shows how the Egyptians extracted square roots by an inverse proportion method In Ancient India the knowledge of theoretical and applied aspects of square and square root was at least as old as the Sulba Sutras dated around 800 500 BC possibly much earlier A method for finding very good approximations to the square roots of 2 and 3 are given in the Baudhayana Sulba Sutra Apastamba who was dated around 600 BCE has given a strikingly accurate value for 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 which is correct up to five decimal places as 1 13 13 4 13 4 34 textstyle 1 frac 1 3 frac 1 3 times 4 frac 1 3 times 4 times 34 Aryabhata in the Aryabhatiya section 2 4 has given a method for finding the square root of numbers having many digits It was known to the ancient Greeks that square roots of positive integers that are not perfect squares are always irrational numbers numbers not expressible as a ratio of two integers that is they cannot be written exactly as mn displaystyle frac m n where m and n are integers This is the theorem Euclid X 9 almost certainly due to Theaetetus dating back to c 380 BC The discovery of irrational numbers including the particular case of the square root of 2 is widely associated with the Pythagorean school Although some accounts attribute the discovery to Hippasus the specific contributor remains uncertain due to the scarcity of primary sources and the secretive nature of the brotherhood It is exactly the length of the diagonal of a square with side length 1 In the Chinese mathematical work Writings on Reckoning written between 202 BC and 186 BC during the early Han dynasty the square root is approximated by using an excess and deficiency method which says to combine the excess and deficiency as the divisor taking the deficiency numerator multiplied by the excess denominator and the excess numerator times the deficiency denominator combine them as the dividend A symbol for square roots written as an elaborate R was invented by Regiomontanus 1436 1476 An R was also used for radix to indicate square roots in Gerolamo Cardano s Ars Magna According to historian of mathematics D E Smith Aryabhata s method for finding the square root was first introduced in Europe by Cataneo in 1546 According to Jeffrey A Oaks Arabs used the letter jim ĝim ج the first letter of the word جذر variously transliterated as jaḏr jiḏr ǧaḏr or ǧiḏr root placed in its initial form ﺟ over a number to indicate its square root The letter jim resembles the present square root shape Its usage goes as far as the end of the twelfth century in the works of the Moroccan mathematician Ibn al Yasamin The symbol for the square root was first used in print in 1525 in Christoph Rudolff s Coss Properties and usesThe graph of the function f x x made up of half a parabola with a vertical directrix The principal square root function f x x displaystyle f x sqrt x usually just referred to as the square root function is a function that maps the set of nonnegative real numbers onto itself In geometrical terms the square root function maps the area of a square to its side length The square root of x is rational if and only if x is a rational number that can be represented as a ratio of two perfect squares See square root of 2 for proofs that this is an irrational number and quadratic irrational for a proof for all non square natural numbers The square root function maps rational numbers into algebraic numbers the latter being a superset of the rational numbers For all real numbers x x2 x x if x 0 x if x lt 0 displaystyle sqrt x 2 left x right begin cases x amp text if x geq 0 x amp text if x lt 0 end cases see absolute value For all nonnegative real numbers x and y xy xy displaystyle sqrt xy sqrt x sqrt y and x x1 2 displaystyle sqrt x x 1 2 The square root function is continuous for all nonnegative x and differentiable for all positive x If f denotes the square root function whose derivative is given by f x 12x displaystyle f x frac 1 2 sqrt x The Taylor series of 1 x displaystyle sqrt 1 x about x 0 converges for x 1 and is given by 1 x n 0 1 n 2n 1 2n n 2 4n xn 1 12x 18x2 116x3 5128x4 displaystyle sqrt 1 x sum n 0 infty frac 1 n 2n 1 2n n 2 4 n x n 1 frac 1 2 x frac 1 8 x 2 frac 1 16 x 3 frac 5 128 x 4 cdots The square root of a nonnegative number is used in the definition of Euclidean norm and distance as well as in generalizations such as Hilbert spaces It defines an important concept of standard deviation used in probability theory and statistics It has a major use in the formula for solutions of a quadratic equation Quadratic fields and rings of quadratic integers which are based on square roots are important in algebra and have uses in geometry Square roots frequently appear in mathematical formulas elsewhere as well as in many physical laws Square roots of positive integersA positive number has two square roots one positive and one negative which are opposite to each other When talking of the square root of a positive integer it is usually the positive square root that is meant The square roots of an integer are algebraic integers more specifically quadratic integers The square root of a positive integer is the product of the roots of its prime factors because the square root of a product is the product of the square roots of the factors Since p2k pk textstyle sqrt p 2k p k only roots of those primes having an odd power in the factorization are necessary More precisely the square root of a prime factorization isp12e1 1 pk2ek 1pk 12ek 1 pn2en p1e1 pnenp1 pk displaystyle sqrt p 1 2e 1 1 cdots p k 2e k 1 p k 1 2e k 1 dots p n 2e n p 1 e 1 dots p n e n sqrt p 1 dots p k As decimal expansions The square roots of the perfect squares e g 0 1 4 9 16 are integers In all other cases the square roots of positive integers are irrational numbers and hence have non repeating decimals in their decimal representations Decimal approximations of the square roots of the first few natural numbers are given in the following table n n displaystyle sqrt n truncated to 50 decimal places0 01 12 1 41421356237309504880 1688724209 6980785696 71875376943 1 73205080756887729352 7446341505 8723669428 05253810384 25 2 23606797749978969640 9173668731 2762354406 18359611526 2 44948974278317809819 7284074705 8913919659 47480656677 2 64575131106459059050 1615753639 2604257102 59183082458 2 82842712474619009760 3377448419 3961571393 43750753899 310 3 16227766016837933199 8893544432 7185337195 5513932521As expansions in other numeral systems As with before the square roots of the perfect squares e g 0 1 4 9 16 are integers In all other cases the square roots of positive integers are irrational numbers and therefore have non repeating digits in any standard positional notation system The square roots of small integers are used in both the SHA 1 and SHA 2 hash function designs to provide nothing up my sleeve numbers As periodic continued fractions A result from the study of irrational numbers as simple continued fractions was obtained by Joseph Louis Lagrange c 1780 Lagrange found that the representation of the square root of any non square positive integer as a continued fraction is periodic That is a certain pattern of partial denominators repeats indefinitely in the continued fraction In a sense these square roots are the very simplest irrational numbers because they can be represented with a simple repeating pattern of integers 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 2 2 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 1 1 2 1 2 4 displaystyle sqrt 4 2 5 displaystyle sqrt 5 2 4 4 6 displaystyle sqrt 6 2 2 4 2 4 7 displaystyle sqrt 7 2 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 8 displaystyle sqrt 8 2 1 4 1 4 9 displaystyle sqrt 9 3 10 displaystyle sqrt 10 3 6 6 11 displaystyle sqrt 11 3 3 6 3 6 12 displaystyle sqrt 12 3 2 6 2 6 13 displaystyle sqrt 13 3 1 1 1 1 6 1 1 1 1 6 14 displaystyle sqrt 14 3 1 2 1 6 1 2 1 6 15 displaystyle sqrt 15 3 1 6 1 6 16 displaystyle sqrt 16 4 17 displaystyle sqrt 17 4 8 8 18 displaystyle sqrt 18 4 4 8 4 8 19 displaystyle sqrt 19 4 2 1 3 1 2 8 2 1 3 1 2 8 20 displaystyle sqrt 20 4 2 8 2 8 The square bracket notation used above is a short form for a continued fraction Written in the more suggestive algebraic form the simple continued fraction for the square root of 11 3 3 6 3 6 looks like this 11 3 13 16 13 16 13 displaystyle sqrt 11 3 cfrac 1 3 cfrac 1 6 cfrac 1 3 cfrac 1 6 cfrac 1 3 ddots where the two digit pattern 3 6 repeats over and over again in the partial denominators Since 11 32 2 the above is also identical to the following generalized continued fractions 11 3 26 26 26 26 26 3 620 1 120 120 120 120 displaystyle sqrt 11 3 cfrac 2 6 cfrac 2 6 cfrac 2 6 cfrac 2 6 cfrac 2 6 ddots 3 cfrac 6 20 1 cfrac 1 20 cfrac 1 20 cfrac 1 20 cfrac 1 20 ddots ComputationSquare roots of positive numbers are not in general rational numbers and so cannot be written as a terminating or recurring decimal expression Therefore in general any attempt to compute a square root expressed in decimal form can only yield an approximation though a sequence of increasingly accurate approximations can be obtained Most pocket calculators have a square root key Computer spreadsheets and other software are also frequently used to calculate square roots Pocket calculators typically implement efficient routines such as the Newton s method frequently with an initial guess of 1 to compute the square root of a positive real number When computing square roots with logarithm tables or slide rules one can exploit the identitiesa e ln a 2 10 log10 a 2 displaystyle sqrt a e ln a 2 10 log 10 a 2 where ln and log10 are the natural and base 10 logarithms By trial and error one can square an estimate for a displaystyle sqrt a and raise or lower the estimate until it agrees to sufficient accuracy For this technique it is prudent to use the identity x c 2 x2 2xc c2 displaystyle x c 2 x 2 2xc c 2 as it allows one to adjust the estimate x by some amount c and measure the square of the adjustment in terms of the original estimate and its square The most common iterative method of square root calculation by hand is known as the Babylonian method or Heron s method after the first century Greek philosopher Heron of Alexandria who first described it The method uses the same iterative scheme as the Newton Raphson method yields when applied to the function y f x x2 a using the fact that its slope at any point is dy dx f x 2x but predates it by many centuries The algorithm is to repeat a simple calculation that results in a number closer to the actual square root each time it is repeated with its result as the new input The motivation is that if x is an overestimate to the square root of a nonnegative real number a then a x will be an underestimate and so the average of these two numbers is a better approximation than either of them However the inequality of arithmetic and geometric means shows this average is always an overestimate of the square root as noted below and so it can serve as a new overestimate with which to repeat the process which converges as a consequence of the successive overestimates and underestimates being closer to each other after each iteration To find x Start with an arbitrary positive start value x The closer to the square root of a the fewer the iterations that will be needed to achieve the desired precision Replace x by the average x a x 2 between x and a x Repeat from step 2 using this average as the new value of x That is if an arbitrary guess for a displaystyle sqrt a is x0 and xn 1 xn a xn 2 then each xn is an approximation of a displaystyle sqrt a which is better for large n than for small n If a is positive the convergence is quadratic which means that in approaching the limit the number of correct digits roughly doubles in each next iteration If a 0 the convergence is only linear however 0 0 displaystyle sqrt 0 0 so in this case no iteration is needed Using the identitya 2 n4na displaystyle sqrt a 2 n sqrt 4 n a the computation of the square root of a positive number can be reduced to that of a number in the range 1 4 This simplifies finding a start value for the iterative method that is close to the square root for which a polynomial or piecewise linear approximation can be used The time complexity for computing a square root with n digits of precision is equivalent to that of multiplying two n digit numbers Another useful method for calculating the square root is the shifting nth root algorithm applied for n 2 The name of the square root function varies from programming language to programming language with sqrt often pronounced squirt being common used in C and derived languages such as C JavaScript PHP and Python Square roots of negative and complex numbersFirst leaf of the complex square rootSecond leaf of the complex square rootUsing the Riemann surface of the square root it is shown how the two leaves fit together The square of any positive or negative number is positive and the square of 0 is 0 Therefore no negative number can have a real square root However it is possible to work with a more inclusive set of numbers called the complex numbers that does contain solutions to the square root of a negative number This is done by introducing a new number denoted by i sometimes by j especially in the context of electricity where i traditionally represents electric current and called the imaginary unit which is defined such that i2 1 Using this notation we can think of i as the square root of 1 but we also have i 2 i2 1 and so i is also a square root of 1 By convention the principal square root of 1 is i or more generally if x is any nonnegative number then the principal square root of x is x ix displaystyle sqrt x i sqrt x The right side as well as its negative is indeed a square root of x since ix 2 i2 x 2 1 x x displaystyle i sqrt x 2 i 2 sqrt x 2 1 x x For every non zero complex number z there exist precisely two numbers w such that w2 z the principal square root of z defined below and its negative Principal square root of a complex number Geometric representation of the 2nd to 6th roots of a complex number z in polar form reif where r z and f arg z If z is real f 0 or p Principal roots are shown in black To find a definition for the square root that allows us to consistently choose a single value called the principal value we start by observing that any complex number x iy displaystyle x iy can be viewed as a point in the plane x y displaystyle x y expressed using Cartesian coordinates The same point may be reinterpreted using polar coordinates as the pair r f displaystyle r varphi where r 0 displaystyle r geq 0 is the distance of the point from the origin and f displaystyle varphi is the angle that the line from the origin to the point makes with the positive real x displaystyle x axis In complex analysis the location of this point is conventionally written reif displaystyle re i varphi Ifz reif with p lt f p displaystyle z re i varphi text with pi lt varphi leq pi then the principal square root of z displaystyle z is defined to be the following z reif 2 displaystyle sqrt z sqrt r e i varphi 2 The principal square root function is thus defined using the non positive real axis as a branch cut If z displaystyle z is a non negative real number which happens if and only if f 0 displaystyle varphi 0 then the principal square root of z displaystyle z is rei 0 2 r displaystyle sqrt r e i 0 2 sqrt r in other words the principal square root of a non negative real number is just the usual non negative square root It is important that p lt f p displaystyle pi lt varphi leq pi because if for example z 2i displaystyle z 2i so f p 2 displaystyle varphi pi 2 then the principal square root is 2i 2eif 2eif 2 2ei p 4 1 i displaystyle sqrt 2i sqrt 2e i varphi sqrt 2 e i varphi 2 sqrt 2 e i pi 4 1 i but using f f 2p 3p 2 displaystyle tilde varphi varphi 2 pi 3 pi 2 would instead produce the other square root 2eif 2 2ei 3p 4 1 i 2i displaystyle sqrt 2 e i tilde varphi 2 sqrt 2 e i 3 pi 4 1 i sqrt 2i The principal square root function is holomorphic everywhere except on the set of non positive real numbers on strictly negative reals it is not even continuous The above Taylor series for 1 x displaystyle sqrt 1 x remains valid for complex numbers x displaystyle x with x lt 1 displaystyle x lt 1 The above can also be expressed in terms of trigonometric functions r cos f isin f r cos f2 isin f2 displaystyle sqrt r left cos varphi i sin varphi right sqrt r left cos frac varphi 2 i sin frac varphi 2 right Algebraic formula The square roots of i When the number is expressed using its real and imaginary parts the following formula can be used for the principal square root x iy 12 x2 y2 x isgn y 12 x2 y2 x displaystyle sqrt x iy sqrt tfrac 1 2 bigl sqrt textstyle x 2 y 2 x bigr i operatorname sgn y sqrt tfrac 1 2 bigl sqrt textstyle x 2 y 2 x bigr where sgn y 1 if y 0 and sgn y 1 otherwise In particular the imaginary parts of the original number and the principal value of its square root have the same sign The real part of the principal value of the square root is always nonnegative For example the principal square roots of i are given by i 1 i2 i 1 i2 displaystyle sqrt i frac 1 i sqrt 2 qquad sqrt i frac 1 i sqrt 2 Notes In the following the complex z and w may be expressed as z z ei8z displaystyle z z e i theta z w w ei8w displaystyle w w e i theta w where p lt 8z p displaystyle pi lt theta z leq pi and p lt 8w p displaystyle pi lt theta w leq pi Because of the discontinuous nature of the square root function in the complex plane the following laws are not true in general zw zw displaystyle sqrt zw sqrt z sqrt w Counterexample for the principal square root z 1 and w 1 This equality is valid only when p lt 8z 8w p displaystyle pi lt theta z theta w leq pi wz wz displaystyle frac sqrt w sqrt z sqrt frac w z Counterexample for the principal square root w 1 and z 1 This equality is valid only when p lt 8w 8z p displaystyle pi lt theta w theta z leq pi z z displaystyle sqrt z left sqrt z right Counterexample for the principal square root z 1 This equality is valid only when 8z p displaystyle theta z neq pi A similar problem appears with other complex functions with branch cuts e g the complex logarithm and the relations logz logw log zw or log z log z which are not true in general Wrongly assuming one of these laws underlies several faulty proofs for instance the following one showing that 1 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 displaystyle begin aligned 1 amp i cdot i amp sqrt 1 cdot sqrt 1 amp sqrt left 1 right cdot left 1 right amp sqrt 1 amp 1 end aligned The third equality cannot be justified see invalid proof Chapter VI Section I Subsection 2 The fallacy that 1 1 It can be made to hold by changing the meaning of so that this no longer represents the principal square root see above but selects a branch for the square root that contains 1 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 cdot sqrt 1 The left hand side becomes either 1 1 i i 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 cdot sqrt 1 i cdot i 1 if the branch includes i or 1 1 i i 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 cdot sqrt 1 i cdot i 1 if the branch includes i while the right hand side becomes 1 1 1 1 displaystyle sqrt left 1 right cdot left 1 right sqrt 1 1 where the last equality 1 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 1 is a consequence of the choice of branch in the redefinition of n th roots and polynomial rootsThe definition of a square root of x displaystyle x as a number y displaystyle y such that y2 x displaystyle y 2 x has been generalized in the following way A cube root of x displaystyle x is a number y displaystyle y such that y3 x displaystyle y 3 x it is denoted x3 displaystyle sqrt 3 x If n is an integer greater than two a n th root of x displaystyle x is a number y displaystyle y such that yn x displaystyle y n x it is denoted xn displaystyle sqrt n x Given any polynomial p a root of p is a number y such that p y 0 For example the n th roots of x are the roots of the polynomial in y yn x displaystyle y n x Abel Ruffini theorem states that in general the roots of a polynomial of degree five or higher cannot be expressed in terms of n th roots Square roots of matrices and operatorsIf A is a positive definite matrix or operator then there exists precisely one positive definite matrix or operator B with B2 A we then define A1 2 B In general matrices may have multiple square roots or even an infinitude of them For example the 2 2 identity matrix has an infinity of square roots though only one of them is positive definite In integral domains including fieldsEach element of an integral domain has no more than 2 square roots The difference of two squares identity u2 v2 u v u v is proved using the commutativity of multiplication If u and v are square roots of the same element then u2 v2 0 Because there are no zero divisors this implies u v or u v 0 where the latter means that two roots are additive inverses of each other In other words if an element a square root u of an element a exists then the only square roots of a are u and u The only square root of 0 in an integral domain is 0 itself In a field of characteristic 2 an element either has one square root or does not have any at all because each element is its own additive inverse so that u u If the field is finite of characteristic 2 then every element has a unique square root In a field of any other characteristic any non zero element either has two square roots as explained above or does not have any Given an odd prime number p let q pe for some positive integer e A non zero element of the field Fq with q elements is a quadratic residue if it has a square root in Fq Otherwise it is a quadratic non residue There are q 1 2 quadratic residues and q 1 2 quadratic non residues zero is not counted in either class The quadratic residues form a group under multiplication The properties of quadratic residues are widely used in number theory In rings in generalUnlike in an integral domain a square root in an arbitrary unital ring need not be unique up to sign For example in the ring Z 8Z displaystyle mathbb Z 8 mathbb Z of integers modulo 8 which is commutative but has zero divisors the element 1 has four distinct square roots 1 and 3 Another example is provided by the ring of quaternions H displaystyle mathbb H which has no zero divisors but is not commutative Here the element 1 has infinitely many square roots including i j and k In fact the set of square roots of 1 is exactly ai bj ck a2 b2 c2 1 displaystyle ai bj ck mid a 2 b 2 c 2 1 A square root of 0 is either 0 or a zero divisor Thus in rings where zero divisors do not exist it is uniquely 0 However rings with zero divisors may have multiple square roots of 0 For example in Z n2Z displaystyle mathbb Z n 2 mathbb Z any multiple of n is a square root of 0 Geometric construction of the square rootConstructing the length x a displaystyle x sqrt a given the a displaystyle a and the unit lengthThe Spiral of Theodorus up to the triangle with a hypotenuse of 17Jay Hambidge s construction of successive square roots using root rectangles The square root of a positive number is usually defined as the side length of a square with the area equal to the given number But the square shape is not necessary for it if one of two similar planar Euclidean objects has the area a times greater than another then the ratio of their linear sizes is a displaystyle sqrt a A square root can be constructed with a compass and straightedge In his Elements Euclid fl 300 BC gave the construction of the geometric mean of two quantities in two different places Proposition II 14 and Proposition VI 13 Since the geometric mean of a and b is ab displaystyle sqrt ab one can construct a displaystyle sqrt a simply by taking b 1 The construction is also given by Descartes in his La Geometrie see figure 2 on page 2 However Descartes made no claim to originality and his audience would have been quite familiar with Euclid Euclid s second proof in Book VI depends on the theory of similar triangles Let AHB be a line segment of length a b with AH a and HB b Construct the circle with AB as diameter and let C be one of the two intersections of the perpendicular chord at H with the circle and denote the length CH as h Then using Thales theorem and as in the proof of Pythagoras theorem by similar triangles triangle AHC is similar to triangle CHB as indeed both are to triangle ACB though we don t need that but it is the essence of the proof of Pythagoras theorem so that AH CH is as HC HB i e a h h b from which we conclude by cross multiplication that h2 ab and finally that h ab displaystyle h sqrt ab When marking the midpoint O of the line segment AB and drawing the radius OC of length a b 2 then clearly OC gt CH i e a b2 ab textstyle frac a b 2 geq sqrt ab with equality if and only if a b which is the arithmetic geometric mean inequality for two variables and as noted above is the basis of the Ancient Greek understanding of Heron s method Another method of geometric construction uses right triangles and induction 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 can be constructed and once x displaystyle sqrt x has been constructed the right triangle with legs 1 and x displaystyle sqrt x has a hypotenuse of x 1 displaystyle sqrt x 1 Constructing successive square roots in this manner yields the Spiral of Theodorus depicted above See alsoApotome mathematics Cube root Functional square root Integer square root Nested radical Nth root Root of unity Solving quadratic equations with continued fractions Square root sum problem Square root principle Quantum gate Square root of NOT gate NOT NotesGel fand p 120 Archived 2016 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Squares and Square Roots www mathsisfun com Retrieved 2020 08 28 Zill Dennis G Shanahan Patrick 2008 A First Course in Complex Analysis With Applications 2nd ed Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 78 ISBN 978 0 7637 5772 4 Archived from the original on 2016 09 01 Extract of page 78 Archived 2016 09 01 at the Wayback Machine Weisstein Eric W Square Root mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 08 28 Analysis of YBC 7289 ubc ca Retrieved 19 January 2015 Anglin W S 1994 Mathematics A Concise History and Philosophy New York Springer Verlag Seidenberg A 1961 The ritual origin of geometry Archive for History of Exact Sciences 1 5 488 527 doi 10 1007 bf00327767 ISSN 0003 9519 S2CID 119992603 Seidenberg pp 501 505 proposes It is the distinction between use and origin By analogy KEPLER needed the ellipse to describe the paths of the planets around the sun he did not however invent the ellipse but made use of a curve that had been lying around for nearly 2000 years In this manner Seidenberg argues Although the date of a manuscript or text cannot give us the age of the practices it discloses nonetheless the evidence is contained in manuscripts Seidenberg quotes Thibaut from 1875 Regarding the time in which the Sulvasutras may have been composed it is impossible to give more accurate information than we are able to give about the date of the Kalpasutras But whatever the period may have been during which Kalpasutras and Sulvasutras were composed in the form now before us we must keep in view that they only give a systematically arranged description of sacrificial rites which had been practiced during long preceding ages Lastly Seidenberg summarizes In 1899 THIBAUT ventured to assign the fourth or the third centuries B C as the latest possible date for the composition of the Sulvasutras it being understood that this refers to a codification of far older material Joseph ch 8 Dutta Bibhutibhusan 1931 On the Origin of the Hindu Terms for Root The American Mathematical Monthly 38 7 371 376 doi 10 2307 2300909 JSTOR 2300909 Retrieved 30 March 2024 Cynthia J Huffman Scott V Thuong 2015 Ancient Indian Rope Geometry in the Classroom Approximating the Square Root of 2 www maa org Retrieved 30 March 2024 Increase the measure by its third and this third by its own fourth less the thirty fourth part of that fourth This is the value with a special quantity in excess J J O Connor E F Robertson November 2020 Apastamba www mathshistory st andrews ac uk School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews Scotland Retrieved 30 March 2024 Heath Sir Thomas L 1908 The Thirteen Books of The Elements Vol 3 Cambridge University Press p 3 Craig Smorynski 2007 History of Mathematics A Supplement illustrated annotated ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 49 ISBN 978 0 387 75480 2 Extract of page 49 Brian E Blank Steven George Krantz 2006 Calculus Single Variable Volume 1 illustrated ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 71 ISBN 978 1 931914 59 8 Extract of page 71 Boyer Carl B Merzbach Uta C 2011 A History of Mathematics 3rd ed Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons pp 51 53 ISBN 978 0470525487 Stillwell John 2010 Mathematics and Its History 3rd ed New York NY Springer pp 14 15 ISBN 978 1441960528 Dauben 2007 p 210 The Development of Algebra 2 maths org Archived from the original on 24 November 2014 Retrieved 19 January 2015 Oaks Jeffrey A 2012 Algebraic Symbolism in Medieval Arabic Algebra PDF Thesis Philosophica p 36 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 12 03 Manguel Alberto 2006 Done on paper the dual nature of numbers and the page The Life of Numbers Taric S A ISBN 84 86882 14 1 Parkhurst David F 2006 Introduction to Applied Mathematics for Environmental Science Springer pp 241 ISBN 9780387342283 Solow Anita E 1993 Learning by Discovery A Lab Manual for Calculus Cambridge University Press pp 48 ISBN 9780883850831 Aitken Mike Broadhurst Bill Hladky Stephen 2009 Mathematics for Biological Scientists Garland Science p 41 ISBN 978 1 136 84393 8 Archived from the original on 2017 03 01 Extract of page 41 Archived 2017 03 01 at the Wayback Machine Heath Sir Thomas L 1921 A History of Greek Mathematics Vol 2 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 323 324 Muller Jean Mic 2006 Elementary functions algorithms and implementation Springer pp 92 93 ISBN 0 8176 4372 9 Chapter 5 p 92 Archived 2016 09 01 at the Wayback Machine Function sqrt CPlusPlus com The C Resources Network 2016 Archived from the original on November 22 2012 Retrieved June 24 2016 Overland Brian 2013 C for the Impatient Addison Wesley p 338 ISBN 9780133257120 OCLC 850705706 Archived from the original on September 1 2016 Retrieved June 24 2016 Abramowitz Milton Stegun Irene A 1964 Handbook of mathematical functions with formulas graphs and mathematical tables Courier Dover Publications p 17 ISBN 0 486 61272 4 Archived from the original on 2016 04 23 Section 3 7 27 p 17 Archived 2009 09 10 at the Wayback Machine Cooke Roger 2008 Classical algebra its nature origins and uses John Wiley and Sons p 59 ISBN 978 0 470 25952 8 Archived from the original on 2016 04 23 This sign function differs from the usual sign function by its value at 0 Maxwell E A 1959 Fallacies in Mathematics Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780511569739 Mitchell Douglas W Using Pythagorean triples to generate square roots of I2 Mathematical Gazette 87 November 2003 499 500 ReferencesDauben Joseph W 2007 Chinese Mathematics I In Katz Victor J ed The Mathematics of Egypt Mesopotamia China India and Islam Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11485 9 Gel fand Izrael M Shen Alexander 1993 Algebra 3rd ed Birkhauser p 120 ISBN 0 8176 3677 3 Joseph George 2000 The Crest of the Peacock Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00659 8 Smith David 1958 History of Mathematics Vol 2 New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 20430 7 Selin Helaine 2008 Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Springer Bibcode 2008ehst book S ISBN 978 1 4020 4559 2 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Square root Algorithms implementations and more Paul Hsieh s square roots webpage How to manually find a square root AMS Featured Column Galileo s Arithmetic by Tony Philips includes a section on how Galileo found square roots