Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.3  Cubes and Cube Roots

Lift the square idea into three dimensions — and watch how signs behave differently.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
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Point 3 of 4 in this lesson: 6.3.3 How cube roots handle signs

6.3.3 How cube roots handle signs

Here is where the third dimension surprises us. A volume can be built from negative factors. Cube 2: that is (−2)×(−2)×(−2). Take it two factors at a time. The first two, (−2)×(−2), give +4 — two negatives make a positive. Then +4×(−2) gives −8. So (−2)³ = −8: an odd number of negative factors leaves the result negative.

Run that backward and you get a cube root that swallows a minus sign without complaint: 3−8 = 2, because (−2)³ = −8. The sign passes straight through the cube root: a negative volume has a negative edge, a positive volume has a positive edge, and a zero has a zero. This is the headline difference from square roots, which you'll line up side by side in the next section.

Cubing keeps the sign of the base; cube-rooting hands that same sign back. 3−8 = 2 and 38 = 2.

And there is no ambiguity to fuss over. Every real number — positive, negative, or zero — has exactly one real cube root. There is only one number whose cube is −8 (it is 2), only one whose cube is 27 (it is 3). That is much tidier than the square case, where x² = 9 had two answers and we had to choose the principal, non-negative one.

Watch out

The sign rule depends on the exponent being odd. For a square (an even power), two of the same negative cancel: (−2)² = +4, never negative. That is exactly why square roots reject negatives but cube roots accept them. Cubing keeps the sign; squaring erases it.

🎮 Try itThe sign-through-the-cube-root machine

Toggle the base to + or −, then cube it and cube-root it back. Watch the sign survive the round trip — and notice the square root cannot make the same trip when the input is negative.

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eastmath.com · 6.3 Cubes and Cube Roots · 6.3.3 How cube roots handle signs