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PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

Page 2: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up

Page 3: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1)

perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because the area of a square is a number times itself (one of its sides times itself, or one side squared). Examples:

The first 15 perfect squares are: 12 22 32 42 52 62 72 82 92 102 112 122 132 142 152 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100, 121, 144, 169, 196, 225

square root: one side of a perfect square - the inverse, or opposite, of squaring a numberExample: 2 and -2 are the square roots of 4, since 22 = 4 and (-2)2 = 4.

Note: Every number has a positive and negative square root (since a negative times a negative is a positive).Example:

What is a “perfect square”?

What is a “square root”??

Page 4: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

What are the parts of “square root”?

How do you find the square root of a number?

A radical symbol indicate a square root. The number inside the radical sign is called the radicand. You can indicate that a number can be positive or negative with a , which means “plus or minus”. The square root of a negative number is undefined (impossible) meaning you can’t have a negative number inside a radical sign. However, the negative can be outside the radical. This is called a negative square root.(Example: - 16 means “the negative square root of 16.”)

To find the root of a number, think of a number that equals the number when it is multiplied times itself

Example: Find the two square roots of 81 .

9 • 9 = 81 Find a number that equals 81 when

(-9) • (-9) = 81 multiplied by itself.

The square roots of 81 are 9 and -9.

Example: Simplify 144 .

12 x 12 = 144 Find a number that equals 144 when

(-12) x (-12) = 144 multiplied by itself.

The square roots of 144 are 12 and -12.

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1)

Page 5: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

a. 25

Simplify each expression.

c. – 64

d. –49

b. 925

The square roots are 5 and -5.= ± 5

35

35

35

The square roots are and – .= ±

The square roots are -8 and 8.= –8

For real numbers, the square root of a negative number is undefined.

is undefined

e. 116

14

14

The square root is .

=

LESSON 11-1

Additional Examples

± ± .

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Page 6: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

How do you simplify an expression with a root?

A radical is a grouping sign, so when you simplify an expression using the order of operations (PEDMAS), radicals are the same as the “P” for parenthesis. In other words, simplify under the radical sign (radicand) first.

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1)

Page 7: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

a. Simplify 3 + 2 • √ 50 – 14

3 + 2 • √ 50 – 14 = 3 + 2 • √36 Work inside grouping symbols.

= 3 + 2 • 6 Simplify the root.

= 3 + 12 Multiply.

= 15 Add.

LESSON 11-1

Additional Examples

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Page 8: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

How can you estimate the square root of a number?

You can estimate the square root of a number by figuring out what perfect squares its between.

Examples: Between what two consecutive integers is 14.52 .

14.52 is between 3 and 4.

Examples: Estimate 8 .

Place 8 on a number line between its perfect squares.

8 is between the perfect squares of 4 and 9 . Since 8 is closer to 9 than 4, 8 is closer to 3 than it is to 2.

8 3

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1)

Page 9: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

Each side of the tile is about 13 inches long.

b. A square tile has an area of 170 square inches.

About how long is each side of the tile?

Square RootsLESSON 11-1

Additional Examples

2 2

Since 170 is not a perfect square, find the perfect square closest to 170. 13 = 169 and 14 = 196, so √170 is between √169 and √196.

Because 170 is closer to 169 than to 196,√170 is closer to 13 than to 14.

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Page 10: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

c. You can use the formula d = 1.5h to estimate the

distance d, in miles, to a horizon line when your eyes are h feet

above the ground. Estimate the distance to the horizon seen by

a lifeguard whose eyes are 20 feet above the ground.

The lifeguard can see about 5 miles to the horizon.

Find the square root of the closest perfect square.

25 = 5

Use the formula.d = 1.5h

Replace h with 20.d = 1.5(20)

Multiply.d = 30

Find perfect squares close to 30.25 30 36< <

LESSON 11-1

Additional Examples

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Page 11: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

What are “natural numbers”, “whole numbers”, and “integers”?

What are “rational” and “irrational” numbers?

natural numbers: the positive numbers from 1 to infinity (1, 2,3,…….)

whole numbers: the positive numbers from 0 to infinity (0,1,2,3…….)

Integers: all of the positive and negative numbers (…-2, -1, 0, 1, 2,…)

rational numbers: any number that can be expressed as a fraction or whose decimal form either terminates or repeats (examples: 6, or 6.0, terminates, or ends, and 8.242424… repeats)

irrational numbers: any number that cannot be expressed as a fraction or whose decimal form doesn’t terminates or repeats (examples: 0.101001000… , , and 3 do not terminate or repeat)

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1)

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c.  3

a.  49

Identify each number as rational or irrational. Explain.

rational, because 49 is a perfect square

rational, because it is a terminating decimal

irrational, because 3 is not a perfect square

rational, because it is a repeating decimal

irrational, because 15 is not a perfect square

rational, because it is a terminating decimal

irrational, because it neither terminates nor repeats

e. – 15

g. 0.1234567 . . .

f. 12.69

d. 0.3333 . . .

b. 0.16

LESSON 11-1

Additional Examples

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Page 13: PRE-ALGEBRA. Lesson 11-1 Warm-Up PRE-ALGEBRA Square Roots and Irrational Numbers (11-1) perfect square: a number times itself - It’s called this, because.

PRE-ALGEBRA

irrational

–10 8

rational

3 mi

Simplify each square root or estimate to the nearest integer.

1. – 100 2. 57

Identify each number as rational or irrational.

3. 48 4. 0.0125

5. The formula d = 1.5h , where h equals the height, in feet, of the viewer’s eyes, estimates the distance d, in miles, to the horizon

from the viewer. Find the distance to the horizon for a person whose eyes are 6 ft above the ground.

LESSON 11-1

Square Roots and Irrational Numbers

Lesson Quiz