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The square root of 2 (approximately 1.4142) is the positive real number that, when multiplied by itself or squared, equals the number 2. It may be written in mathematics as or . It is an algebraic number, and therefore not a transcendental number. Technically, it should be called the principal square root of 2, to distinguish it from the negative number with the same property.
![]() The square root of 2 is equal to the length of the hypotenuse of an isosceles right triangle with legs of length 1. | |
Representations | |
---|---|
Decimal | 1.4142135623730950488... |
Continued fraction |
Geometrically, the square root of 2 is the length of a diagonal across a square with sides of one unit of length; this follows from the Pythagorean theorem. It was probably the first number known to be irrational. The fraction 99/70 (≈ 1.4142857) is sometimes used as a good rational approximation with a reasonably small denominator.
Sequence A002193 in the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences consists of the digits in the decimal expansion of the square root of 2, here truncated to 65 decimal places:
- 1.41421356237309504880168872420969807856967187537694807317667973799
History
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The Babylonian clay tablet YBC 7289 (c. 1800–1600 BC) gives an approximation of in four sexagesimal figures, 1 24 51 10, which is accurate to about six decimal digits, and is the closest possible three-place sexagesimal representation of
, representing a margin of error of only –0.000042%:
Another early approximation is given in ancient Indian mathematical texts, the Sulbasutras (c. 800–200 BC), as follows: Increase the length [of the side] by its third and this third by its own fourth less the thirty-fourth part of that fourth. That is,
This approximation, diverging from the actual value of by approximately +0.07%, is the seventh in a sequence of increasingly accurate approximations based on the sequence of Pell numbers, which can be derived from the continued fraction expansion of
. Despite having a smaller denominator, it is only slightly less accurate than the Babylonian approximation.
Pythagoreans discovered that the diagonal of a square is incommensurable with its side, or in modern language, that the square root of two is irrational. Little is known with certainty about the time or circumstances of this discovery, but the name of Hippasus of Metapontum is often mentioned. For a while, the Pythagoreans treated as an official secret the discovery that the square root of two is irrational, and, according to legend, Hippasus was murdered for divulging it, though this has little to any substantial evidence in traditional historian practice. The square root of two is occasionally called Pythagoras's number or Pythagoras's constant.
Ancient Roman architecture
In ancient Roman architecture, Vitruvius describes the use of the square root of 2 progression or ad quadratum technique. It consists basically in a geometric, rather than arithmetic, method to double a square, in which the diagonal of the original square is equal to the side of the resulting square. Vitruvius attributes the idea to Plato. The system was employed to build pavements by creating a square tangent to the corners of the original square at 45 degrees of it. The proportion was also used to design atria by giving them a length equal to a diagonal taken from a square, whose sides are equivalent to the intended atrium's width.
Decimal value
Computation algorithms
There are many algorithms for approximating as a ratio of integers or as a decimal. The most common algorithm for this, which is used as a basis in many computers and calculators, is the Babylonian method for computing square roots, an example of Newton's method for computing roots of arbitrary functions. It goes as follows:
First, pick a guess, ; the value of the guess affects only how many iterations are required to reach an approximation of a certain accuracy. Then, using that guess, iterate through the following recursive computation:
Each iteration improves the approximation, roughly doubling the number of correct digits. Starting with , the subsequent iterations yield:
Rational approximations
A simple rational approximation 99/70 (≈ 1.4142857) is sometimes used. Despite having a denominator of only 70, it differs from the correct value by less than 1/10,000 (approx. +0.72×10−4).
The next two better rational approximations are 140/99 (≈ 1.4141414...) with a marginally smaller error (approx. −0.72×10−4), and 239/169 (≈ 1.4142012) with an error of approx −0.12×10−4.
The rational approximation of the square root of two derived from four iterations of the Babylonian method after starting with a0 = 1 (665,857/470,832) is too large by about 1.6×10−12; its square is ≈ 2.0000000000045.
Records in computation
In 1997, the value of was calculated to 137,438,953,444 decimal places by Yasumasa Kanada's team. In February 2006, the record for the calculation of
was eclipsed with the use of a home computer. Shigeru Kondo calculated one trillion decimal places in 2010. Other mathematical constants whose decimal expansions have been calculated to similarly high precision include π, e, and the golden ratio. Such computations provide empirical evidence of whether these numbers are normal.
This is a table of recent records in calculating the digits of .
Date | Name | Number of digits |
---|---|---|
26 December 2023 | Jordan Ranous | 20000000000000 |
5 January 2022 | Tizian Hanselmann | 10000000001000 |
28 June 2016 | Ron Watkins | 10000000000000 |
3 April 2016 | Ron Watkins | 5000000000000 |
20 January 2016 | Ron Watkins | 2000000000100 |
9 February 2012 | Alexander Yee | 2000000000050 |
22 March 2010 | Shigeru Kondo | 1000000000000 |
Proofs of irrationality
Proof by infinite descent
One proof of the number's irrationality is the following proof by infinite descent. It is also a proof of a negation by refutation: it proves the statement " is not rational" by assuming that it is rational and then deriving a falsehood.
- Assume that
is a rational number, meaning that there exists a pair of integers whose ratio is exactly
.
- If the two integers have a common factor, it can be eliminated using the Euclidean algorithm.
- Then
can be written as an irreducible fraction
such that a and b are coprime integers (having no common factor) which additionally means that at least one of a or b must be odd.
- It follows that
and
. ( (a/b)n = an/bn ) ( a2 and b2 are integers)
- Therefore, a2 is even because it is equal to 2b2. (2b2 is necessarily even because it is 2 times another whole number.)
- It follows that a must be even (as squares of odd integers are never even).
- Because a is even, there exists an integer k that fulfills
.
- Substituting 2k from step 7 for a in the second equation of step 4:
, which is equivalent to
.
- Because 2k2 is divisible by two and therefore even, and because
, it follows that b2 is also even which means that b is even.
- By steps 5 and 8, a and b are both even, which contradicts step 3 (that
is irreducible).
Since we have derived a falsehood, the assumption (1) that is a rational number must be false. This means that
is not a rational number; that is to say,
is irrational.
This proof was hinted at by Aristotle, in his Analytica Priora, §I.23. It appeared first as a full proof in Euclid's Elements, as proposition 117 of Book X. However, since the early 19th century, historians have agreed that this proof is an interpolation and not attributable to Euclid.
Proof using reciprocals
Assume by way of contradiction that were rational. Then we may write
as an irreducible fraction in lowest terms, with coprime positive integers
. Since
, it follows that
can be expressed as the irreducible fraction
. However, since
and
differ by an integer, it follows that the denominators of their irreducible fraction representations must be the same, i.e.
. This gives the desired contradiction.
Proof by unique factorization
As with the proof by infinite descent, we obtain . Being the same quantity, each side has the same prime factorization by the fundamental theorem of arithmetic, and in particular, would have to have the factor 2 occur the same number of times. However, the factor 2 appears an odd number of times on the right, but an even number of times on the left—a contradiction.
Application of the rational root theorem
The irrationality of also follows from the rational root theorem, which states that a rational root of a polynomial, if it exists, must be the quotient of a factor of the constant term and a factor of the leading coefficient. In the case of
, the only possible rational roots are
and
. As
is not equal to
or
, it follows that
is irrational. This application also invokes the integer root theorem, a stronger version of the rational root theorem for the case when
is a monic polynomial with integer coefficients; for such a polynomial, all roots are necessarily integers (which
is not, as 2 is not a perfect square) or irrational.
The rational root theorem (or integer root theorem) may be used to show that any square root of any natural number that is not a perfect square is irrational. For other proofs that the square root of any non-square natural number is irrational, see Quadratic irrational number or Infinite descent.
Geometric proofs
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A simple proof is attributed to Stanley Tennenbaum when he was a student in the early 1950s. Assume that , where
and
are coprime positive integers. Then
and
are the smallest positive integers for which
. Now consider two squares with sides
and
, and place two copies of the smaller square inside the larger one as shown in Figure 1. The area of the square overlap region in the centre must equal the sum of the areas of the two uncovered squares. Hence there exist positive integers
and
such that
. Since it can be seen geometrically that
and
, this contradicts the original assumption.
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Tom M. Apostol made another geometric reductio ad absurdum argument showing that is irrational. It is also an example of proof by infinite descent. It makes use of classic compass and straightedge construction, proving the theorem by a method similar to that employed by ancient Greek geometers. It is essentially the same algebraic proof as in the previous paragraph, viewed geometrically in another way.
Let △ ABC be a right isosceles triangle with hypotenuse length m and legs n as shown in Figure 2. By the Pythagorean theorem, . Suppose m and n are integers. Let m:n be a ratio given in its lowest terms.
Draw the arcs BD and CE with centre A. Join DE. It follows that AB = AD, AC = AE and ∠BAC and ∠DAE coincide. Therefore, the triangles ABC and ADE are congruent by SAS.
Because ∠EBF is a right angle and ∠BEF is half a right angle, △ BEF is also a right isosceles triangle. Hence BE = m − n implies BF = m − n. By symmetry, DF = m − n, and △ FDC is also a right isosceles triangle. It also follows that FC = n − (m − n) = 2n − m.
Hence, there is an even smaller right isosceles triangle, with hypotenuse length 2n − m and legs m − n. These values are integers even smaller than m and n and in the same ratio, contradicting the hypothesis that m:n is in lowest terms. Therefore, m and n cannot be both integers; hence, is irrational.
Constructive proof
While the proofs by infinite descent are constructively valid when "irrational" is defined to mean "not rational", we can obtain a constructively stronger statement by using a positive definition of "irrational" as "quantifiably apart from every rational". Let a and b be positive integers such that 1<a/b< 3/2 (as 1<2< 9/4 satisfies these bounds). Now 2b2 and a2 cannot be equal, since the first has an odd number of factors 2 whereas the second has an even number of factors 2. Thus |2b2 − a2| ≥ 1. Multiplying the absolute difference |√2 − a/b| by b2(√2 + a/b) in the numerator and denominator, we get
the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that 1<a/b< 3/2, giving a/b + √2 ≤ 3 (otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established). This gives a lower bound of 1/3b2 for the difference |√2 − a/b|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality in its constructively stronger form, not relying on the law of excluded middle. This proof constructively exhibits an explicit discrepancy between and any rational.
Proof by Pythagorean triples
This proof uses the following property of primitive Pythagorean triples:
- If a, b, and c are coprime positive integers such that a2 + b2 = c2, then c is never even.
This lemma can be used to show that two identical perfect squares can never be added to produce another perfect square.
Suppose the contrary that is rational. Therefore,
- where
and
- Squaring both sides,
Here, (b, b, a) is a primitive Pythagorean triple, and from the lemma a is never even. However, this contradicts the equation 2b2 = a2 which implies that a must be even.
Multiplicative inverse
The multiplicative inverse (reciprocal) of the square root of two is a widely used constant, with the decimal value:
- 0.70710678118654752440084436210484903928483593768847...
It is often encountered in geometry and trigonometry because the unit vector, which makes a 45° angle with the axes in a plane, has the coordinates
Each coordinate satisfies
Properties
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One interesting property of is
since
This is related to the property of silver ratios.
can also be expressed in terms of copies of the imaginary unit i using only the square root and arithmetic operations, if the square root symbol is interpreted suitably for the complex numbers i and −i:
is also the only real number other than 1 whose infinite tetrate (i.e., infinite exponential tower) is equal to its square. In other words: if for c > 1, x1 = c and xn+1 = cxn for n > 1, the limit of xn as n → ∞ will be called (if this limit exists) f(c). Then
is the only number c > 1 for which f(c) = c2. Or symbolically:
appears in Viète's formula for π,
which is related to the formula
Similar in appearance but with a finite number of terms, appears in various trigonometric constants:
It is not known whether is a normal number, which is a stronger property than irrationality, but statistical analyses of its binary expansion are consistent with the hypothesis that it is normal to base two.
Representations
Series and product
The identity cos π/4 = sin π/4 = 1/√2, along with the infinite product representations for the sine and cosine, leads to products such as
and
or equivalently,
The number can also be expressed by taking the Taylor series of a trigonometric function. For example, the series for cos π/4 gives
The Taylor series of √1 + x with x = 1 and using the double factorial n!! gives
The convergence of this series can be accelerated with an Euler transform, producing
It is not known whether can be represented with a BBP-type formula. BBP-type formulas are known for π√2 and √2 ln(1+√2), however.
The number can be represented by an infinite series of Egyptian fractions, with denominators defined by 2n th terms of a Fibonacci-like recurrence relation a(n) = 34a(n−1) − a(n−2), a(0) = 0, a(1) = 6.
Continued fraction
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The square root of two has the following continued fraction representation:
The convergents p/q formed by truncating this representation form a sequence of fractions that approximate the square root of two to increasing accuracy, and that are described by the Pell numbers (i.e., p2 − 2q2 = ±1). The first convergents are: 1/1, 3/2, 7/5, 17/12, 41/29, 99/70, 239/169, 577/408 and the convergent following p/q is p + 2q/p + q. The convergent p/q differs from by almost exactly 1/2√2q2, which follows from:
Nested square
The following nested square expressions converge to :
Applications
Paper size
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In 1786, German physics professor Georg Christoph Lichtenberg found that any sheet of paper whose long edge is times longer than its short edge could be folded in half and aligned with its shorter side to produce a sheet with exactly the same proportions as the original. This ratio of lengths of the longer over the shorter side guarantees that cutting a sheet in half along a line results in the smaller sheets having the same (approximate) ratio as the original sheet. When Germany standardised paper sizes at the beginning of the 20th century, they used Lichtenberg's ratio to create the "A" series of paper sizes. Today, the (approximate) aspect ratio of paper sizes under ISO 216 (A4, A0, etc.) is 1:
.
Proof:
Let shorter length and
longer length of the sides of a sheet of paper, with
as required by ISO 216.
Let be the analogous ratio of the halved sheet, then
Physical sciences
There are some interesting properties involving the square root of 2 in the physical sciences:
- The square root of two is the frequency ratio of a tritone interval in twelve-tone equal temperament music.
- The square root of two forms the relationship of f-stops in photographic lenses, which in turn means that the ratio of areas between two successive apertures is 2.
- The celestial latitude (declination) of the Sun during a planet's astronomical cross-quarter day points equals the tilt of the planet's axis divided by
.
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- In the brain there are lattice cells, discovered in 2005 by a group led by May-Britt and Edvard Moser. "The grid cells were found in the cortical area located right next to the hippocampus [...] At one end of this cortical area the mesh size is small and at the other it is very large. However, the increase in mesh size is not left to chance, but increases by the squareroot of two from one area to the next."
See also
- List of mathematical constants
- Square root of 3, √3
- Square root of 5, √5
- Gelfond–Schneider constant, 2√2
- Silver ratio, 1 + √2
Notes
- Fowler, David H. (1994). "The Story of the Discovery of Incommensurability, Revisited". In Gavroglu, Kostas; Christianidis, Jean; Nicolaidis, Efthymios (eds.). Trends in the Historiography of Science. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. 151. Dortrecht: Springer. pp. 221–236. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-3596-4. ISBN 978-9048142644.
- Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A002193 (Decimal expansion of square root of 2)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
- Fowler and Robson, p. 368.
Photograph, illustration, and description of the root(2) tablet from the Yale Babylonian Collection Archived 2012-08-13 at the Wayback Machine
High resolution photographs, descriptions, and analysis of the root(2) tablet (YBC 7289) from the Yale Babylonian Collection - Henderson, David W. (2000). "Square roots in the Śulba Sūtras". In Gorini, Catherine A. (ed.). Geometry At Work: Papers in Applied Geometry. Mathematical Association of America Notes. Vol. 53. Washington, D.C.: The Mathematical Association of America. pp. 39–45. ISBN 978-0883851647.
- "The Dangerous Ratio". nrich.maths.org. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
- Von Fritz, Kurt (1945). "The Discovery of Incommensurability by Hippasus of Metapontum". Annals of Mathematics. 46 (2): 242–264. doi:10.2307/1969021. ISSN 0003-486X. JSTOR 1969021.
- Conway, John H.; Guy, Richard K. (1996). The Book of Numbers. New York: Copernicus. p. 25. ISBN 978-1461240723.
- Williams, Kim; Ostwald, Michael (2015). Architecture and Mathematics from Antiquity to the Future: Volume I: Antiquity to the 1500s. Birkhäuser. p. 204. ISBN 9783319001371.
- Although the term "Babylonian method" is common in modern usage, there is no direct evidence showing how the Babylonians computed the approximation of
seen on tablet YBC 7289. Fowler and Robson offer informed and detailed conjectures.
Fowler and Robson, p. 376. Flannery, p. 32, 158. - Constants and Records of Computation. Numbers.computation.free.fr. 12 Aug 2010. Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
- Records set by y-cruncher. Archived from the original on 2022-04-07. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
- All that Aristotle says, while writing about proofs by contradiction, is that "the diagonal of the square is incommensurate with the side, because odd numbers are equal to evens if it is supposed to be commensurate".
- The edition of the Greek text of the Elements published by E. F. August in Berlin in 1826–1829 already relegates this proof to an Appendix. The same thing occurs with J. L. Heiberg's edition (1883–1888).
- Miller, Steven J.; Montague, David (Apr 2012). "Picturing Irrationality". Mathematics Magazine. Vol. 85, no. 2. pp. 110–114. doi:10.4169/math.mag.85.2.110. JSTOR 10.4169/math.mag.85.2.110.
- Yanofsky, Noson S. (May–Jun 2016). "Paradoxes, Contradictions, and the Limits of Science". American Scientist. Vol. 103, no. 3. pp. 166–173. JSTOR 44808923.
- Apostol, Tom M. (2000). "Irrationality of The Square Root of Two – A Geometric Proof". The American Mathematical Monthly. 107 (9): 841–842. doi:10.2307/2695741. JSTOR 2695741.
- See Katz, Karin Usadi; Katz, Mikhail G. (2011). "Meaning in Classical Mathematics: Is it at Odds with Intuitionism?". Intellectica. 56 (2): 223–302 (see esp. Section 2.3, footnote 15). arXiv:1110.5456. Bibcode:2011arXiv1110.5456U.
- Bishop, Errett (1985). "Schizophrenia in Contemporary Mathematics.". In Rosenblatt, Murray (ed.). Errett Bishop: Reflections on Him and His Research. Contemporary Mathematics. Vol. 39. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. pp. 1–32. doi:10.1090/conm/039/788163. ISBN 0821850407. ISSN 0271-4132.
- Sierpiński, Wacław (2003). Pythagorean Triangles. Translated by Sharma, Ambikeshwa. Mineola, NY: Dover. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-0486432786.
- Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A010503 (Decimal expansion of 1/sqrt(2))". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
- Courant, Richard; Robbins, Herbert (1941). What is mathematics? An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods. London: Oxford University Press. p. 124.
- Julian D. A. Wiseman Sin and cos in surds Archived 2009-05-06 at the Wayback Machine
- Good, I. J.; Gover, T. N. (1967). "The generalized serial test and the binary expansion of
". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A. 130 (1): 102–107. doi:10.2307/2344040. JSTOR 2344040.
- Bailey, David H. (13 Feb 2011). A Compendium of BBP-Type Formulas for Mathematical Constants (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-06-10. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A082405 (a(n) = 34*a(n-1) - a(n-2); a(0)=0, a(1)=6)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation. Retrieved 2016-09-05.
- Houston, Keith (2016). The Book: A Cover-to-Cover Exploration of the Most Powerful Object of Our Time. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 324. ISBN 978-0393244809.
- Nordengen, Kaja (2016). The Book: Hjernen er sternen. 2016 Kagge Forlag AS. p. 81. ISBN 978-82-489-2018-2.
References
- Aristotle (1938) [c. 350 BC]. Categories; On Interpretation; Prior Analytics. Greek text with translation. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 325. Translated by H. P. Cooke; Hugh Tredennick. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Prior Analytics § I.23. ISBN 9780674993594.
- Flannery, David (2006). The Square Root of 2: A Dialogue Concerning a Number and a Sequence. New York: Copernicus Books. ISBN 978-0387202204.
- Fowler, David; Robson, Eleanor (1998). "Square Root Approximations in Old Babylonian Mathematics: YBC 7289 in Context". Historia Mathematica. 25 (4): 366–378. doi:10.1006/hmat.1998.2209.
External links
- Gourdon, X.; Sebah, P. (2001). "Pythagoras' Constant:
". Numbers, Constants and Computation..
- The Square Root of Two to 5 million digits by Jerry Bonnell and Robert J. Nemiroff. May, 1994.
- Square root of 2 is irrational, a collection of proofs
- Haran, Brady (27 Jan 2012). Root 2 (video). Numberphile. featuring Grime, James; Bowley, Roger.
-
Search Engine 2 billion searchable digits of √2, π and e
The square root of 2 approximately 1 4142 is the positive real number that when multiplied by itself or squared equals the number 2 It may be written in mathematics as 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 or 21 2 displaystyle 2 1 2 It is an algebraic number and therefore not a transcendental number Technically it should be called the principal square root of 2 to distinguish it from the negative number with the same property Square root of 2The square root of 2 is equal to the length of the hypotenuse of an isosceles right triangle with legs of length 1 RepresentationsDecimal1 4142135623 73095 0488 Continued fraction1 12 12 12 12 displaystyle 1 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 2 ddots Geometrically the square root of 2 is the length of a diagonal across a square with sides of one unit of length this follows from the Pythagorean theorem It was probably the first number known to be irrational The fraction 99 70 1 4142857 is sometimes used as a good rational approximation with a reasonably small denominator Sequence A002193 in the On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences consists of the digits in the decimal expansion of the square root of 2 here truncated to 65 decimal places 1 4142135623 73095 04880 16887 24209 69807 85696 71875 37694 80731 76679 73799HistoryBabylonian clay tablet YBC 7289 with annotations Besides showing the square root of 2 in sexagesimal 1 24 51 10 the tablet also gives an example where one side of the square is 30 and the diagonal then is 42 25 35 The sexagesimal digit 30 can also stand for 0 30 1 2 in which case 0 42 25 35 is approximately 0 7071065 The Babylonian clay tablet YBC 7289 c 1800 1600 BC gives an approximation of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 in four sexagesimal figures 1 24 51 10 which is accurate to about six decimal digits and is the closest possible three place sexagesimal representation of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 representing a margin of error of only 0 000042 1 2460 51602 10603 305470216000 1 41421296 displaystyle 1 frac 24 60 frac 51 60 2 frac 10 60 3 frac 305470 216000 1 41421 overline 296 Another early approximation is given in ancient Indian mathematical texts the Sulbasutras c 800 200 BC as follows Increase the length of the side by its third and this third by its own fourth less the thirty fourth part of that fourth That is 1 13 13 4 13 4 34 577408 1 4142156862745098039 displaystyle 1 frac 1 3 frac 1 3 times 4 frac 1 3 times 4 times 34 frac 577 408 1 41421 overline 56862745098039 This approximation diverging from the actual value of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 by approximately 0 07 is the seventh in a sequence of increasingly accurate approximations based on the sequence of Pell numbers which can be derived from the continued fraction expansion of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Despite having a smaller denominator it is only slightly less accurate than the Babylonian approximation Pythagoreans discovered that the diagonal of a square is incommensurable with its side or in modern language that the square root of two is irrational Little is known with certainty about the time or circumstances of this discovery but the name of Hippasus of Metapontum is often mentioned For a while the Pythagoreans treated as an official secret the discovery that the square root of two is irrational and according to legend Hippasus was murdered for divulging it though this has little to any substantial evidence in traditional historian practice The square root of two is occasionally called Pythagoras s number or Pythagoras s constant Ancient Roman architecture In ancient Roman architecture Vitruvius describes the use of the square root of 2 progression or ad quadratum technique It consists basically in a geometric rather than arithmetic method to double a square in which the diagonal of the original square is equal to the side of the resulting square Vitruvius attributes the idea to Plato The system was employed to build pavements by creating a square tangent to the corners of the original square at 45 degrees of it The proportion was also used to design atria by giving them a length equal to a diagonal taken from a square whose sides are equivalent to the intended atrium s width Decimal valueComputation algorithms There are many algorithms for approximating 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 as a ratio of integers or as a decimal The most common algorithm for this which is used as a basis in many computers and calculators is the Babylonian method for computing square roots an example of Newton s method for computing roots of arbitrary functions It goes as follows First pick a guess a0 gt 0 displaystyle a 0 gt 0 the value of the guess affects only how many iterations are required to reach an approximation of a certain accuracy Then using that guess iterate through the following recursive computation an 1 12 an 2an an2 1an displaystyle a n 1 frac 1 2 left a n dfrac 2 a n right frac a n 2 frac 1 a n Each iteration improves the approximation roughly doubling the number of correct digits Starting with a0 1 displaystyle a 0 1 the subsequent iterations yield a1 32 1 5 a2 1712 1 416 a3 577408 1 414215 a4 665857470832 1 4142135623746 displaystyle begin alignedat 3 a 1 amp tfrac 3 2 amp amp mathbf 1 5 a 2 amp tfrac 17 12 amp amp mathbf 1 41 6 ldots a 3 amp tfrac 577 408 amp amp mathbf 1 41421 5 ldots a 4 amp tfrac 665857 470832 amp amp mathbf 1 41421356237 46 ldots amp qquad vdots end alignedat Rational approximations A simple rational approximation 99 70 1 4142857 is sometimes used Despite having a denominator of only 70 it differs from the correct value by less than 1 10 000 approx 0 72 10 4 The next two better rational approximations are 140 99 1 4141414 with a marginally smaller error approx 0 72 10 4 and 239 169 1 4142012 with an error of approx 0 12 10 4 The rational approximation of the square root of two derived from four iterations of the Babylonian method after starting with a0 1 665 857 470 832 is too large by about 1 6 10 12 its square is 2 000000 000 0045 Records in computation In 1997 the value of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 was calculated to 137 438 953 444 decimal places by Yasumasa Kanada s team In February 2006 the record for the calculation of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 was eclipsed with the use of a home computer Shigeru Kondo calculated one trillion decimal places in 2010 Other mathematical constants whose decimal expansions have been calculated to similarly high precision include p e and the golden ratio Such computations provide empirical evidence of whether these numbers are normal This is a table of recent records in calculating the digits of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Date Name Number of digits26 December 2023 Jordan Ranous 20000 000 000 0005 January 2022 Tizian Hanselmann 10000 000 001 00028 June 2016 Ron Watkins 10000 000 000 0003 April 2016 Ron Watkins 5000 000 000 00020 January 2016 Ron Watkins 2000 000 000 1009 February 2012 Alexander Yee 2000 000 000 05022 March 2010 Shigeru Kondo 1000 000 000 000Proofs of irrationalityProof by infinite descent One proof of the number s irrationality is the following proof by infinite descent It is also a proof of a negation by refutation it proves the statement 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is not rational by assuming that it is rational and then deriving a falsehood Assume that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is a rational number meaning that there exists a pair of integers whose ratio is exactly 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 If the two integers have a common factor it can be eliminated using the Euclidean algorithm Then 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 can be written as an irreducible fraction ab displaystyle frac a b such that a and b are coprime integers having no common factor which additionally means that at least one of a or b must be odd It follows that a2b2 2 displaystyle frac a 2 b 2 2 and a2 2b2 displaystyle a 2 2b 2 a b n an bn a2 and b2 are integers Therefore a2 is even because it is equal to 2b2 2b2 is necessarily even because it is 2 times another whole number It follows that a must be even as squares of odd integers are never even Because a is even there exists an integer k that fulfills a 2k displaystyle a 2k Substituting 2k from step 7 for a in the second equation of step 4 2b2 a2 2k 2 4k2 displaystyle 2b 2 a 2 2k 2 4k 2 which is equivalent to b2 2k2 displaystyle b 2 2k 2 Because 2k2 is divisible by two and therefore even and because 2k2 b2 displaystyle 2k 2 b 2 it follows that b2 is also even which means that b is even By steps 5 and 8 a and b are both even which contradicts step 3 that ab displaystyle frac a b is irreducible Since we have derived a falsehood the assumption 1 that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is a rational number must be false This means that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is not a rational number that is to say 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is irrational This proof was hinted at by Aristotle in his Analytica Priora I 23 It appeared first as a full proof in Euclid s Elements as proposition 117 of Book X However since the early 19th century historians have agreed that this proof is an interpolation and not attributable to Euclid Proof using reciprocals Assume by way of contradiction that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 were rational Then we may write 2 1 qp displaystyle sqrt 2 1 frac q p as an irreducible fraction in lowest terms with coprime positive integers q gt p displaystyle q gt p Since 2 1 2 1 2 12 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 sqrt 2 1 2 1 2 1 it follows that 2 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 can be expressed as the irreducible fraction pq displaystyle frac p q However since 2 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 and 2 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 differ by an integer it follows that the denominators of their irreducible fraction representations must be the same i e q p displaystyle q p This gives the desired contradiction Proof by unique factorization As with the proof by infinite descent we obtain a2 2b2 displaystyle a 2 2b 2 Being the same quantity each side has the same prime factorization by the fundamental theorem of arithmetic and in particular would have to have the factor 2 occur the same number of times However the factor 2 appears an odd number of times on the right but an even number of times on the left a contradiction Application of the rational root theorem The irrationality of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 also follows from the rational root theorem which states that a rational root of a polynomial if it exists must be the quotient of a factor of the constant term and a factor of the leading coefficient In the case of p x x2 2 displaystyle p x x 2 2 the only possible rational roots are 1 displaystyle pm 1 and 2 displaystyle pm 2 As 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is not equal to 1 displaystyle pm 1 or 2 displaystyle pm 2 it follows that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is irrational This application also invokes the integer root theorem a stronger version of the rational root theorem for the case when p x displaystyle p x is a monic polynomial with integer coefficients for such a polynomial all roots are necessarily integers which 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is not as 2 is not a perfect square or irrational The rational root theorem or integer root theorem may be used to show that any square root of any natural number that is not a perfect square is irrational For other proofs that the square root of any non square natural number is irrational see Quadratic irrational number or Infinite descent Geometric proofs Figure 1 Stanley Tennenbaum s geometric proof of the irrationality of 2 A simple proof is attributed to Stanley Tennenbaum when he was a student in the early 1950s Assume that 2 a b displaystyle sqrt 2 a b where a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b are coprime positive integers Then a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b are the smallest positive integers for which a2 2b2 displaystyle a 2 2b 2 Now consider two squares with sides a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b and place two copies of the smaller square inside the larger one as shown in Figure 1 The area of the square overlap region in the centre must equal the sum of the areas of the two uncovered squares Hence there exist positive integers p 2b a displaystyle p 2b a and q a b displaystyle q a b such that p2 2q2 displaystyle p 2 2q 2 Since it can be seen geometrically that p lt a displaystyle p lt a and q lt b displaystyle q lt b this contradicts the original assumption Figure 2 Tom Apostol s geometric proof of the irrationality of 2 Tom M Apostol made another geometric reductio ad absurdum argument showing that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is irrational It is also an example of proof by infinite descent It makes use of classic compass and straightedge construction proving the theorem by a method similar to that employed by ancient Greek geometers It is essentially the same algebraic proof as in the previous paragraph viewed geometrically in another way Let ABC be a right isosceles triangle with hypotenuse length m and legs n as shown in Figure 2 By the Pythagorean theorem mn 2 displaystyle frac m n sqrt 2 Suppose m and n are integers Let m n be a ratio given in its lowest terms Draw the arcs BD and CE with centre A Join DE It follows that AB AD AC AE and BAC and DAE coincide Therefore the triangles ABC and ADE are congruent by SAS Because EBF is a right angle and BEF is half a right angle BEF is also a right isosceles triangle Hence BE m n implies BF m n By symmetry DF m n and FDC is also a right isosceles triangle It also follows that FC n m n 2n m Hence there is an even smaller right isosceles triangle with hypotenuse length 2n m and legs m n These values are integers even smaller than m and n and in the same ratio contradicting the hypothesis that m n is in lowest terms Therefore m and n cannot be both integers hence 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is irrational Constructive proof While the proofs by infinite descent are constructively valid when irrational is defined to mean not rational we can obtain a constructively stronger statement by using a positive definition of irrational as quantifiably apart from every rational Let a and b be positive integers such that 1 lt a b lt 3 2 as 1 lt 2 lt 9 4 satisfies these bounds Now 2b2 and a2 cannot be equal since the first has an odd number of factors 2 whereas the second has an even number of factors 2 Thus 2b2 a2 1 Multiplying the absolute difference 2 a b by b2 2 a b in the numerator and denominator we get 2 ab 2b2 a2 b2 2 ab 1b2 2 ab 13b2 displaystyle left sqrt 2 frac a b right frac 2b 2 a 2 b 2 left sqrt 2 frac a b right geq frac 1 b 2 left sqrt 2 frac a b right geq frac 1 3b 2 the latter inequality being true because it is assumed that 1 lt a b lt 3 2 giving a b 2 3 otherwise the quantitative apartness can be trivially established This gives a lower bound of 1 3b2 for the difference 2 a b yielding a direct proof of irrationality in its constructively stronger form not relying on the law of excluded middle This proof constructively exhibits an explicit discrepancy between 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 and any rational Proof by Pythagorean triples This proof uses the following property of primitive Pythagorean triples If a b and c are coprime positive integers such that a2 b2 c2 then c is never even This lemma can be used to show that two identical perfect squares can never be added to produce another perfect square Suppose the contrary that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is rational Therefore 2 ab displaystyle sqrt 2 a over b where a b Z displaystyle a b in mathbb Z and gcd a b 1 displaystyle gcd a b 1 Squaring both sides 2 a2b2 displaystyle 2 a 2 over b 2 2b2 a2 displaystyle 2b 2 a 2 b2 b2 a2 displaystyle b 2 b 2 a 2 Here b b a is a primitive Pythagorean triple and from the lemma a is never even However this contradicts the equation 2b2 a2 which implies that a must be even Multiplicative inverseThe multiplicative inverse reciprocal of the square root of two is a widely used constant with the decimal value 0 7071067811 86547 52440 08443 62104 84903 92848 35937 68847 It is often encountered in geometry and trigonometry because the unit vector which makes a 45 angle with the axes in a plane has the coordinates 22 22 displaystyle left frac sqrt 2 2 frac sqrt 2 2 right Each coordinate satisfies 22 12 12 sin 45 cos 45 displaystyle frac sqrt 2 2 sqrt tfrac 1 2 frac 1 sqrt 2 sin 45 circ cos 45 circ PropertiesAngle size and sector area are the same when the conic radius is 2 This diagram illustrates the circular and hyperbolic functions based on sector areas u One interesting property of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is 12 1 2 1 displaystyle 1 over sqrt 2 1 sqrt 2 1 since 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 displaystyle left sqrt 2 1 right left sqrt 2 1 right 2 1 1 This is related to the property of silver ratios 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 can also be expressed in terms of copies of the imaginary unit i using only the square root and arithmetic operations if the square root symbol is interpreted suitably for the complex numbers i and i i iii and i i i i displaystyle frac sqrt i i sqrt i i text and frac sqrt i i sqrt i i 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is also the only real number other than 1 whose infinite tetrate i e infinite exponential tower is equal to its square In other words if for c gt 1 x1 c and xn 1 cxn for n gt 1 the limit of xn as n will be called if this limit exists f c Then 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is the only number c gt 1 for which f c c2 Or symbolically 222 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 cdot cdot cdot 2 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 appears in Viete s formula for p 2p 12 12 1212 12 1212 1212 displaystyle frac 2 pi sqrt frac 1 2 cdot sqrt frac 1 2 frac 1 2 sqrt frac 1 2 cdot sqrt frac 1 2 frac 1 2 sqrt frac 1 2 frac 1 2 sqrt frac 1 2 cdots which is related to the formula p limm 2m2 2 2 2 2 m square roots displaystyle pi lim m to infty 2 m underbrace sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 cdots sqrt 2 m text square roots Similar in appearance but with a finite number of terms 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 appears in various trigonometric constants sin p32 122 2 2 2sin 3p16 122 2 2sin 11p32 122 2 2 2sin p16 122 2 2sin 7p32 122 2 2 2sin 3p8 122 2sin 3p32 122 2 2 2sin p4 122sin 13p32 122 2 2 2sin p8 122 2sin 9p32 122 2 2 2sin 7p16 122 2 2sin 5p32 122 2 2 2sin 5p16 122 2 2sin 15p32 122 2 2 2 displaystyle begin aligned sin frac pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 3 pi 16 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 11 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 6pt sin frac pi 16 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 7 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 3 pi 8 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 6pt sin frac 3 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac pi 4 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 13 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 6pt sin frac pi 8 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 9 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 7 pi 16 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 6pt sin frac 5 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 5 pi 16 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 amp quad sin frac 15 pi 32 amp tfrac 1 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 end aligned It is not known whether 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 is a normal number which is a stronger property than irrationality but statistical analyses of its binary expansion are consistent with the hypothesis that it is normal to base two RepresentationsSeries and product The identity cos p 4 sin p 4 1 2 along with the infinite product representations for the sine and cosine leads to products such as 12 k 0 1 1 4k 2 2 1 14 1 136 1 1100 displaystyle frac 1 sqrt 2 prod k 0 infty left 1 frac 1 4k 2 2 right left 1 frac 1 4 right left 1 frac 1 36 right left 1 frac 1 100 right cdots and 2 k 0 4k 2 2 4k 1 4k 3 2 21 3 6 65 7 10 109 11 14 1413 15 displaystyle sqrt 2 prod k 0 infty frac 4k 2 2 4k 1 4k 3 left frac 2 cdot 2 1 cdot 3 right left frac 6 cdot 6 5 cdot 7 right left frac 10 cdot 10 9 cdot 11 right left frac 14 cdot 14 13 cdot 15 right cdots or equivalently 2 k 0 1 14k 1 1 14k 3 1 11 1 13 1 15 1 17 displaystyle sqrt 2 prod k 0 infty left 1 frac 1 4k 1 right left 1 frac 1 4k 3 right left 1 frac 1 1 right left 1 frac 1 3 right left 1 frac 1 5 right left 1 frac 1 7 right cdots The number can also be expressed by taking the Taylor series of a trigonometric function For example the series for cos p 4 gives 12 k 0 1 k p4 2k 2k displaystyle frac 1 sqrt 2 sum k 0 infty frac 1 k left frac pi 4 right 2k 2k The Taylor series of 1 x with x 1 and using the double factorial n gives 2 k 0 1 k 1 2k 3 2k 1 12 12 4 1 32 4 6 1 3 52 4 6 8 1 12 18 116 5128 7256 displaystyle sqrt 2 sum k 0 infty 1 k 1 frac 2k 3 2k 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 2 cdot 4 frac 1 cdot 3 2 cdot 4 cdot 6 frac 1 cdot 3 cdot 5 2 cdot 4 cdot 6 cdot 8 cdots 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 8 frac 1 16 frac 5 128 frac 7 256 cdots The convergence of this series can be accelerated with an Euler transform producing 2 k 0 2k 1 23k 1 k 2 12 38 1564 35256 3154096 69316384 displaystyle sqrt 2 sum k 0 infty frac 2k 1 2 3k 1 k 2 frac 1 2 frac 3 8 frac 15 64 frac 35 256 frac 315 4096 frac 693 16384 cdots It is not known whether 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 can be represented with a BBP type formula BBP type formulas are known for p 2 and 2 ln 1 2 however The number can be represented by an infinite series of Egyptian fractions with denominators defined by 2n th terms of a Fibonacci like recurrence relation a n 34a n 1 a n 2 a 0 0 a 1 6 2 32 12 n 0 1a 2n 32 12 16 1204 1235416 displaystyle sqrt 2 frac 3 2 frac 1 2 sum n 0 infty frac 1 a 2 n frac 3 2 frac 1 2 left frac 1 6 frac 1 204 frac 1 235416 dots right Continued fraction The square root of 2 and approximations by convergents of continued fractions The square root of two has the following continued fraction representation 2 1 12 12 12 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 1 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 2 cfrac 1 ddots The convergents p q formed by truncating this representation form a sequence of fractions that approximate the square root of two to increasing accuracy and that are described by the Pell numbers i e p2 2q2 1 The first convergents are 1 1 3 2 7 5 17 12 41 29 99 70 239 169 577 408 and the convergent following p q is p 2q p q The convergent p q differs from 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 by almost exactly 1 2 2 q2 which follows from 2 pq 2q2 p2 q2 2 pq 1q2 2 pq 122q2 displaystyle left sqrt 2 frac p q right frac 2q 2 p 2 q 2 left sqrt 2 frac p q right frac 1 q 2 left sqrt 2 frac p q right thickapprox frac 1 2 sqrt 2 q 2 Nested square The following nested square expressions converge to 2 textstyle sqrt 2 2 32 2 14 14 14 2 2 2 32 4 18 18 18 2 2 2 displaystyle begin aligned sqrt 2 amp tfrac 3 2 2 left tfrac 1 4 left tfrac 1 4 bigl tfrac 1 4 cdots bigr 2 right 2 right 2 10mu amp tfrac 3 2 4 left tfrac 1 8 left tfrac 1 8 bigl tfrac 1 8 cdots bigr 2 right 2 right 2 end aligned ApplicationsPaper size The A series of paper sizes In 1786 German physics professor Georg Christoph Lichtenberg found that any sheet of paper whose long edge is 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 times longer than its short edge could be folded in half and aligned with its shorter side to produce a sheet with exactly the same proportions as the original This ratio of lengths of the longer over the shorter side guarantees that cutting a sheet in half along a line results in the smaller sheets having the same approximate ratio as the original sheet When Germany standardised paper sizes at the beginning of the 20th century they used Lichtenberg s ratio to create the A series of paper sizes Today the approximate aspect ratio of paper sizes under ISO 216 A4 A0 etc is 1 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Proof Let S displaystyle S shorter length and L displaystyle L longer length of the sides of a sheet of paper with R LS 2 displaystyle R frac L S sqrt 2 as required by ISO 216 Let R L S displaystyle R frac L S be the analogous ratio of the halved sheet then R SL 2 2SL 2 L S 22 2 R displaystyle R frac S L 2 frac 2S L frac 2 L S frac 2 sqrt 2 sqrt 2 R Physical sciences There are some interesting properties involving the square root of 2 in the physical sciences The square root of two is the frequency ratio of a tritone interval in twelve tone equal temperament music The square root of two forms the relationship of f stops in photographic lenses which in turn means that the ratio of areas between two successive apertures is 2 The celestial latitude declination of the Sun during a planet s astronomical cross quarter day points equals the tilt of the planet s axis divided by 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Distances between vertices of a double unit cube are square roots of the first six natural numbers 7 is not possible due to Legendre s three square theorem In the brain there are lattice cells discovered in 2005 by a group led by May Britt and Edvard Moser The grid cells were found in the cortical area located right next to the hippocampus At one end of this cortical area the mesh size is small and at the other it is very large However the increase in mesh size is not left to chance but increases by the squareroot of two from one area to the next See alsoList of mathematical constants Square root of 3 3 Square root of 5 5 Gelfond Schneider constant 2 2 Silver ratio 1 2NotesFowler David H 1994 The Story of the Discovery of Incommensurability Revisited In Gavroglu Kostas Christianidis Jean Nicolaidis Efthymios eds Trends in the Historiography of Science Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 151 Dortrecht Springer pp 221 236 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 3596 4 ISBN 978 9048142644 Sloane N J A ed Sequence A002193 Decimal expansion of square root of 2 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Retrieved 2020 08 10 Fowler and Robson p 368 Photograph illustration and description of the root 2 tablet from the Yale Babylonian Collection Archived 2012 08 13 at the Wayback Machine High resolution photographs descriptions and analysis of the root 2 tablet YBC 7289 from the Yale Babylonian Collection Henderson David W 2000 Square roots in the Sulba Sutras In Gorini Catherine A ed Geometry At Work Papers in Applied Geometry Mathematical Association of America Notes Vol 53 Washington D C The Mathematical Association of America pp 39 45 ISBN 978 0883851647 The Dangerous Ratio nrich maths org Retrieved 2023 09 18 Von Fritz Kurt 1945 The Discovery of Incommensurability by Hippasus of Metapontum Annals of Mathematics 46 2 242 264 doi 10 2307 1969021 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 1969021 Conway John H Guy Richard K 1996 The Book of Numbers New York Copernicus p 25 ISBN 978 1461240723 Williams Kim Ostwald Michael 2015 Architecture and Mathematics from Antiquity to the Future Volume I Antiquity to the 1500s Birkhauser p 204 ISBN 9783319001371 Although the term Babylonian method is common in modern usage there is no direct evidence showing how the Babylonians computed the approximation of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 seen on tablet YBC 7289 Fowler and Robson offer informed and detailed conjectures Fowler and Robson p 376 Flannery p 32 158 Constants and Records of Computation Numbers computation free fr 12 Aug 2010 Archived from the original on 2012 03 01 Retrieved 2012 09 07 Records set by y cruncher Archived from the original on 2022 04 07 Retrieved 2022 04 07 All that Aristotle says while writing about proofs by contradiction is that the diagonal of the square is incommensurate with the side because odd numbers are equal to evens if it is supposed to be commensurate The edition of the Greek text of the Elements published by E F August in Berlin in 1826 1829 already relegates this proof to an Appendix The same thing occurs with J L Heiberg s edition 1883 1888 Miller Steven J Montague David Apr 2012 Picturing Irrationality Mathematics Magazine Vol 85 no 2 pp 110 114 doi 10 4169 math mag 85 2 110 JSTOR 10 4169 math mag 85 2 110 Yanofsky Noson S May Jun 2016 Paradoxes Contradictions and the Limits of Science American Scientist Vol 103 no 3 pp 166 173 JSTOR 44808923 Apostol Tom M 2000 Irrationality of The Square Root of Two A Geometric Proof The American Mathematical Monthly 107 9 841 842 doi 10 2307 2695741 JSTOR 2695741 See Katz Karin Usadi Katz Mikhail G 2011 Meaning in Classical Mathematics Is it at Odds with Intuitionism Intellectica 56 2 223 302 see esp Section 2 3 footnote 15 arXiv 1110 5456 Bibcode 2011arXiv1110 5456U Bishop Errett 1985 Schizophrenia in Contemporary Mathematics In Rosenblatt Murray ed Errett Bishop Reflections on Him and His Research Contemporary Mathematics Vol 39 Providence RI American Mathematical Society pp 1 32 doi 10 1090 conm 039 788163 ISBN 0821850407 ISSN 0271 4132 Sierpinski Waclaw 2003 Pythagorean Triangles Translated by Sharma Ambikeshwa Mineola NY Dover pp 4 6 ISBN 978 0486432786 Sloane N J A ed Sequence A010503 Decimal expansion of 1 sqrt 2 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Retrieved 2024 11 03 Courant Richard Robbins Herbert 1941 What is mathematics An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods London Oxford University Press p 124 Julian D A Wiseman Sin and cos in surds Archived 2009 05 06 at the Wayback Machine Good I J Gover T N 1967 The generalized serial test and the binary expansion of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A 130 1 102 107 doi 10 2307 2344040 JSTOR 2344040 Bailey David H 13 Feb 2011 A Compendium of BBP Type Formulas for Mathematical Constants PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2011 06 10 Retrieved 2010 04 30 Sloane N J A ed Sequence A082405 a n 34 a n 1 a n 2 a 0 0 a 1 6 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Retrieved 2016 09 05 Houston Keith 2016 The Book A Cover to Cover Exploration of the Most Powerful Object of Our Time W W Norton amp Company p 324 ISBN 978 0393244809 Nordengen Kaja 2016 The Book Hjernen er sternen 2016 Kagge Forlag AS p 81 ISBN 978 82 489 2018 2 ReferencesAristotle 1938 c 350 BC Categories On Interpretation Prior Analytics Greek text with translation Loeb Classical Library Vol 325 Translated by H P Cooke Hugh Tredennick Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Prior Analytics I 23 ISBN 9780674993594 Flannery David 2006 The Square Root of 2 A Dialogue Concerning a Number and a Sequence New York Copernicus Books ISBN 978 0387202204 Fowler David Robson Eleanor 1998 Square Root Approximations in Old Babylonian Mathematics YBC 7289 in Context Historia Mathematica 25 4 366 378 doi 10 1006 hmat 1998 2209 External linksGourdon X Sebah P 2001 Pythagoras Constant 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Numbers Constants and Computation The Square Root of Two to 5 million digits by Jerry Bonnell and Robert J Nemiroff May 1994 Square root of 2 is irrational a collection of proofs Haran Brady 27 Jan 2012 Root 2 video Numberphile featuring Grime James Bowley Roger 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 Search Engine 2 billion searchable digits of 2 p and e