Unit: Squares, Cubes & Roots
Chapter: Introduction to Cubes & Cubes Roots
Reference: – What is a Cube of a Number, Perfect Cubes, Properties of Cubes, Cube Root Definition, Cube Root Symbol (∛), Finding Cube Roots of Perfect Cubes, Cube Roots of Negative Numbers, Estimating Cube Roots, Cube Roots of Fractions and Decimals, Real-Life Applications (Volume), Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes
After studying this chapter, you should be able to understand:
- What is a Cube of a Number
- What are Perfect Cubes
- What is a Cube Root and How to Find It
- How to Find Cube Roots of Negative Numbers
- How to Estimate Cube Roots
Introduction to Cubes & Cube Roots
Definition
The cube of a number is the number multiplied by itself twice (n³ = n × n × n). A perfect cube is a number that can be expressed as n³ for some integer n. The cube root of a number a is the number b such that b³ = a. It is written as ∛a.
When we study cubes and cube roots, we essentially ask:
"What number, when multiplied by itself twice, gives this value?"
Cubes and cube roots are essential for understanding volume and three-dimensional scaling.
Importance of Cubes & Cube Roots
- Used in volume calculations (cube-shaped containers, boxes)
- Used in physics (density, three-dimensional scaling)
- Used in engineering and architecture
- Helps solve cubic equations
- Appears in computer graphics and 3D modeling
Example
Cube of 4: 4³ = 4 × 4 × 4 = 64
Cube of -3: (-3)³ = -27
Cube root of 125: ∛125 = 5 (because 5³ = 125)
Cube root of -64: ∛(-64) = -4 (because (-4)³ = -64)
Subtopics
1. Cube of a Number
The cube of a number n is written as n³ and equals n × n × n.
Cubes of first 15 natural numbers:
|
n |
n³ |
n |
n³ |
|
1 |
1 |
9 |
729 |
|
2 |
8 |
10 |
1000 |
|
3 |
27 |
11 |
1331 |
|
4 |
64 |
12 |
1728 |
|
5 |
125 |
13 |
2197 |
|
6 |
216 |
14 |
2744 |
|
7 |
343 |
15 |
3375 |
|
8 |
512 |
16 |
4096 |
Properties of Cubes:
- Cube of a positive number is positive
- Cube of a negative number is negative: (-5)³ = -125
- Cube of 0 is 0
- Cubes can end in any digit (0-9)
- If n is even, n³ is even; if n is odd, n³ is odd
2. Perfect Cubes
A perfect cube is a number that is the cube of an integer.
Examples of Perfect Cubes: 1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729, 1000, 1331, 1728, 2197, 2744, 3375, 4096, …
Testing if a number is a perfect cube:
- Find the prime factorization
- If each prime's exponent is a multiple of 3, the number is a perfect cube
Example – Is 216 a perfect cube?
216 = 2³ × 3³ → exponents are 3 and 3 (multiples of 3) → yes, ∛216 = 2 × 3 = 6
Example – Is 72 a perfect cube?
72 = 2³ × 3² → exponent of 3 is 2 (not multiple of 3) → not a perfect cube
3. Cube Root
The cube root of a number a is a number b such that b³ = a. It is written as ∛a.
Important: Unlike square roots (which are always non-negative as principal roots), cube roots can be negative.
Finding Cube Roots of Perfect Cubes:
∛1 = 1, ∛8 = 2, ∛27 = 3, ∛64 = 4, ∛125 = 5, ∛216 = 6, ∛343 = 7, ∛512 = 8, ∛729 = 9, ∛1000 = 10
Method using prime factorization:
Example: Find ∛1728
1728 = 2⁶ × 3³ (since 1728 ÷ 64 = 27, 64=2⁶, 27=3³)
∛1728 = 2^(6/3) × 3^(3/3) = 2² × 3¹ = 4 × 3 = 12
4. Cube Roots of Negative Numbers
Cube roots of negative numbers are negative because a negative × negative × negative = negative.
Examples:
- ∛(-8) = -2 because (-2)³ = -8
- ∛(-27) = -3 because (-3)³ = -27
- ∛(-125) = -5 because (-5)³ = -125
- ∛(-1) = -1 because (-1)³ = -1
Note: Square roots of negative numbers are not real, but cube roots of negative numbers are real.
5. Estimating Cube Roots
If a number is not a perfect cube, its cube root is irrational. We can estimate it between two consecutive integers.
Steps:
- Find the two perfect cubes closest to the number (one smaller, one larger)
- The cube root lies between the cube roots of those perfect cubes
- Estimate based on how close the number is to each perfect cube
Example 1 – Estimate ∛20:
Perfect cubes: 8 (∛8=2) and 27 (∛27=3)
20 is closer to 27? 20-8=12, 27-20=7, closer to 27? Actually 7<12, so closer to 27
∛20 ≈ 2.7 (actual 2.714)
Example 2 – Estimate ∛50:
Perfect cubes: 27 (∛27=3) and 64 (∛64=4)
50-27=23, 64-50=14, closer to 64
∛50 ≈ 3.7 (actual 3.684)
6. Cube Roots of Fractions
To find ∛(a/b), take the cube root of numerator and denominator separately.
∛(a/b) = ∛a / ∛b (b ≠ 0)
Example 1: ∛(8/27) = ∛8 / ∛27 = 2/3
Example 2: ∛(1/64) = 1/4
Example 3: ∛(27/125) = 3/5
7. Cube Roots of Decimals
To find cube roots of decimals, write the decimal as a fraction with a perfect cube denominator if possible.
Example 1: ∛0.008 = ∛(8/1000) = ∛8 / ∛1000 = 2/10 = 0.2
Example 2: ∛0.027 = ∛(27/1000) = 3/10 = 0.3
Example 3: ∛0.125 = ∛(125/1000) = 5/10 = 0.5
Example 4: ∛0.064 = ∛(64/1000) = 4/10 = 0.4
Pattern: ∛(0.00a) where a is a perfect cube? 0.001 → 0.1, 0.008 → 0.2, 0.027 → 0.3, etc.
8. Real-Life Applications of Cubes and Cube Roots
|
Application |
Example |
|
Volume of cube |
Volume = 125 cm³ → side = ∛125 = 5 cm |
|
Container design |
A cube-shaped tank holds 64 L → side = ∛64 = 4 m |
|
Density calculations |
Mass/volume problems |
|
Three-dimensional scaling |
Doubling volume scales side by ∛2 |
|
Packaging (cubic boxes) |
Finding dimensions from capacity |
Solved Examples
Example 1 – Cube: Find the cube of 11.
Solution: 11³ = 11 × 11 × 11 = 1331
Answer: 1331
Example 2 – Perfect Cube: Is 729 a perfect cube?
Solution: 9 × 9 × 9 = 729, so yes, 9³ = 729
Answer: Yes, 9³
Example 3 – Cube Root: Find ∛512.
Solution: 8 × 8 × 8 = 512, so ∛512 = 8
Answer: 8
Example 4 – Negative Cube Root: Find ∛(-343).
Solution: (-7)³ = -343, so ∛(-343) = -7
Answer: -7
Example 5 – Fraction Cube Root: Find ∛(64/125).
Solution: ∛64 / ∛125 = 4/5
Answer: 4/5
Example 6 – Estimation: Estimate ∛30.
Solution: Perfect cubes: 27 (∛27=3) and 64 (∛64=4)
30-27=3, 64-30=34, closer to 27
∛30 ≈ 3.1 (actual 3.107)
Answer: About 3.1
Example 7 – Odd One Out (Cubes):
Examine the five numbers below. Exactly one is NOT a perfect cube. Identify it.
|
Item |
Number |
|
A |
125 |
|
B |
216 |
|
C |
343 |
|
D |
400 |
|
E |
512 |
Solution:
A: 125 = 5³ ✓ perfect cube
B: 216 = 6³ ✓ perfect cube
C: 343 = 7³ ✓ perfect cube
D: 400 is NOT a perfect cube (7³=343, 8³=512) ✗
E: 512 = 8³ ✓ perfect cube
Three reasons why D is the odd one out:
(A) 400 cannot be expressed as n³ for any integer n (343 and 512 are the nearest cubes).
(B) All other options (A, B, C, E) are perfect cubes (125, 216, 343, 512).
(C) The cube root of 400 is irrational (≈7.37), while the cube roots of the others are integers.
Conclusion: D is the odd one out.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1 – Confusing cube with square
3³ = 27, not 9. 3² = 9.
Correct understanding: Cube is n × n × n (multiply three times).
Mistake 2 – Thinking cube roots of negatives are not real
∛(-8) = -2, which is real. Square roots of negatives are not real, but cube roots are.
Correct understanding: Odd roots of negative numbers are negative real numbers.
Mistake 3 – Forgetting that 1 and -1 are their own cube roots
1³ = 1, (-1)³ = -1, so ∛1 = 1, ∛(-1) = -1.
Correct understanding: These are special cases.
Mistake 4 – Misplacing decimal in cube root of decimal
∛0.008 = 0.2, not 0.02 (0.02³ = 0.000008).
Correct understanding: Count decimal places carefully.
Mistake 5 – Estimating cube roots poorly
∛100 is about 4.64, not 5 (5³=125).
Correct understanding: Find the two closest perfect cubes first.
Mistake 6 – Not using negative cube root when needed
If a problem asks for the cube root of -64, the answer is -4, not "no solution."
Correct understanding: Negative numbers have real cube roots.
Quick Reference Summary
Cube: n³ = n × n × n
Perfect Cube: n³ for integer n (1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729, 1000, …)
Cube Root: ∛a = b means b³ = a
Cube Root of Negative: ∛(-a) = -∛a (when a > 0)
Estimating Cube Roots: Find nearest perfect cubes, estimate between them
Prime Factorization Method: Group prime factors in triples
Cube Roots of Fractions: ∛(a/b) = ∛a / ∛b
Cube Roots of Decimals: Convert to fraction with perfect cube denominator
Common Cube Roots:
- ∛1 = 1
- ∛8 = 2
- ∛27 = 3
- ∛64 = 4
- ∛125 = 5
- ∛216 = 6
- ∛343 = 7
- ∛512 = 8
- ∛729 = 9
- ∛1000 = 10