Square root

Revision as of 02:21, 30 October 2006 by I_like_pie (talk | contribs)

The square root of a number x is a number y such that $y^2 = x$. Thus y is a square root of x if and only if x is the square of y. The square root of a number x is denoted $\sqrt x$. For instance, $\sqrt 4 = 2$. When we consider only positive reals, the square root function is the inverse of the squaring function. However, this does not hold more generally because every positive real has two square roots, one positive and one negative. The notation $\sqrt x$ is used for the positive, or principal, square root.

It is also written as the one half exponent of the argument, so that squaring undoes this function, just as multiplying by 2 undoes $\frac12$. Similar functions can be generalized to any real number power, as well as complex powers.

See also