Introduction To Squares, Cubes & Roots

Unit: Squares, Cubes & Roots

Chapter: Introduction to Squares, Cubes & Roots

Reference: – What is a Square of a Number, what is a Cube of a Number, Perfect Squares and Perfect Cubes, Square Root Definition, Cube Root Definition, Square Root Symbol (√), Cube Root Symbol (), Finding Square Roots of Perfect Squares, Finding Cube Roots of Perfect Cubes, Estimating Square Roots, Real-Life Applications, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes

After studying this chapter, you should be able to understand:

  • What is the Square and Cube of a Number
  • What are Perfect Squares and Perfect Cubes
  • What is a Square Root and How to Find It
  • What is a Cube Root and How to Find It
  • How to Estimate Square Roots

Introduction to Squares, Cubes & Roots

Definition

The square of a number is the number multiplied by itself (n² = n × n). The cube of a number is the number multiplied by itself twice (n³ = n × n × n). A square root is the number that gives a given square when multiplied by itself (√a = b means b² = a). A cube root is the number that gives a given cube when multiplied by itself twice (∛a = b means b³ = a).

When we study squares, cubes, and roots, we essentially ask:

"How can we find the number that, when multiplied by itself (or twice), gives a certain value?"

These concepts are fundamental to algebra, geometry, and many real-world calculations.

Importance of Squares, Cubes & Roots

  • Used in area (squares) and volume (cubes) calculations
  • Essential for the Pythagorean theorem
  • Used in physics (distance, acceleration, energy)
  • Helps solve quadratic and cubic equations
  • Used in computer graphics and engineering

Example

Square of 5: 5² = 25 (5 × 5)
Cube of 4: 4³ = 64 (4 × 4 × 4)
Square root of 36: √36 = 6 (because 6² = 36)
Cube root of 27: ∛27 = 3 (because 3³ = 27)

Subtopics

1. Square of a Number

The square of a number n is written as n² and equals n × n.

Squares of first 12 natural numbers:

n

n

1

1

7

49

2

4

8

64

3

9

9

81

4

16

10

100

5

25

11

121

6

36

12

144

Properties of Squares:

  • Square of a positive number is positive
  • Square of a negative number is also positive: (-5)² = 25
  • Square of 0 is 0
  • A perfect square always ends in 0, 1, 4, 5, 6, or 9 (never 2, 3, 7, 8)

2. Cube of a Number

The cube of a number n is written as n³ and equals n × n × n.

Cubes of first 12 natural numbers:

n

n

1

1

7

343

2

8

8

512

3

27

9

729

4

64

10

1000

5

125

11

1331

6

216

12

1728

Properties of Cubes:

  • Cube of a positive number is positive
  • Cube of a negative number is negative: (-4)³ = -64
  • Cube of 0 is 0
  • Cubes can end in any digit (0-9)

3. Perfect Squares and Perfect Cubes

Perfect Square: A number that is the square of an integer.
Examples: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100, 121, 144, 169, 196, 225, …

Perfect Cube: A number that is the cube of an integer.
Examples: 1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729, 1000, 1331, 1728, …

Note: Some numbers are both perfect squares and perfect cubes (perfect sixth powers). Example: 64 = 8² = 4³, 729 = 27² = 9³

4. Square Root

The square root of a number a is a number b such that b² = a. It is written as √a. The square root is always non-negative (principal square root).

Finding Square Roots of Perfect Squares:

√1 = 1, √4 = 2, √9 = 3, √16 = 4, √25 = 5, √36 = 6, √49 = 7, √64 = 8, √81 = 9, √100 = 10, √121 = 11, √144 = 12, √169 = 13, √196 = 14, √225 = 15

Example: √144 = 12 because 12² = 144

Important: Every positive number has two square roots: a positive and a negative. The symbol √ means the principal (positive) square root. So √36 = 6 (not -6), but both 6 and -6 are square roots of 36.

5. Cube Root

The cube root of a number a is a number b such that b³ = a. It is written as ∛a. Cube roots can be positive or 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

Example: ∛216 = 6 because 6³ = 216

Negative Cube Roots: ∛(-64) = -4 because (-4)³ = -64

6. Estimating Square Roots (for Non-Perfect Squares)

If a number is not a perfect square, its square root is irrational. We can estimate it between two consecutive integers.

Steps:

  1. Find the two perfect squares closest to the number (one smaller, one larger)
  2. The square root lies between the square roots of those perfect squares
  3. Estimate based on how close the number is to each perfect square

Example 1 – Estimate √20:
16 and 25 are perfect squares around 20
√16 = 4, √25 = 5
Since 20 is closer to 16 than to 25, √20 is about 4.5 (actual ≈ 4.47)

Example 2 – Estimate √50:
49 and 64 are perfect squares around 50
√49 = 7, √64 = 8
50 is very close to 49, so √50 is about 7.1 (actual ≈ 7.07)

7. Squares and Square Roots in Real Life

  • Area of a square: If area = 36 cm², side = √36 = 6 cm
  • Pythagorean theorem: In a right triangle, c = √(a² + b²)
  • Distance formula: Distance between two points = √[(x₂-x₁)² + (y₂-y₁)²]
  • Standard deviation in statistics
  • Velocity in physics: Kinetic energy formula

8. Cubes and Cube Roots in Real Life

  • Volume of a cube: If volume = 125 cm³, side = ∛125 = 5 cm
  • Density calculations
  • Cube-shaped containers (packaging)
  • Three-dimensional scaling

 

Solved Examples

Example 1 – Square: Find the square of 12.

Solution: 12² = 12 × 12 = 144

Answer: 144

 

Example 2 – Cube: Find the cube of 7.

Solution: 7³ = 7 × 7 × 7 = 343

Answer: 343

 

Example 3 – Square Root: Find √81.

Solution: √81 = 9 because 9² = 81

Answer: 9

 

Example 4 – Cube Root: Find ∛125.

Solution: ∛125 = 5 because 5³ = 125

Answer: 5

 

Example 5 – Estimate Square Root: Estimate √40.

Solution: Perfect squares: 36 (√36=6) and 49 (√49=7)
40 is closer to 36, so √40 is about 6.3 (actual ≈ 6.32)

Answer: About 6.3

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1 – Confusing square and square root
√64 = 8, not 8² = 64. Square root is the inverse of square.
Correct understanding: Square root "undoes" a square.

Mistake 2 – Forgetting that negative numbers can be squared
(-6)² = 36, so √36 = 6 (principal root), but -6 is also a square root.
Correct understanding: Every positive number has two square roots.

Mistake 3 – Thinking cube roots can't be negative
∛(-8) = -2 because (-2)³ = -8.
Correct understanding: Cube roots of negative numbers are negative.

Mistake 4 – Misestimating square roots
√50 ≈ 7.07, not 7 or 8.
Correct understanding: Find the two closest perfect squares and estimate between them.

Mistake 5 – Forgetting perfect square endings
A perfect square cannot end in 2,3,7, or 8. So 123 is not a perfect square.
Correct understanding: Check the last digit as a quick test.

Mistake 6 – Confusing cube with square
3² = 9, 3³ = 27 (very different!).
Correct understanding: Square multiplies twice; cube multiplies three times.

 

Quick Reference Summary

Square: n² = n × n

Cube: n³ = n × n × n

Perfect Square: n² for integer n (1, 4, 9, 16, 25, …)

Perfect Cube: n³ for integer n (1, 8, 27, 64, 125, …)

Square Root: √a = b means b² = a (b ≥ 0)

Cube Root: ∛a = b means b³ = a

Estimating Square Roots: Find closest perfect squares, then estimate

Common Square Roots:
√1=1, √4=2, √9=3, √16=4, √25=5, √36=6, √49=7, √64=8, √81=9, √100=10

Common Cube Roots:
∛1=1, ∛8=2, ∛27=3, ∛64=4, ∛125=5, ∛216=6, ∛343=7, ∛512=8, ∛729=9, ∛1000=10

 

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