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
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 4 in this lesson: 6.3.4 Square roots versus cube roots

6.3.4 Square roots versus cube roots

Put the two roots shoulder to shoulder and their personalities show. The square root is cautious about signs: it needs its input to be at least zero, and it always hands back something at least zero. There is no real −9, because no real number squared is negative. The cube root has no such fear: feed it any sign and the sign simply passes out the other side.

They differ in writing, too. A square root hides a quiet index of 2 — we almost never write it, so alone means "second root." A cube root shows its index out loud: the small 3 in 3 is there on purpose, to say "third root." If you ever see that little 3, you are undoing a cube, not a square.

Same shaped symbol, different jobs. The square root carries a silent index 2; the cube root wears a visible index 3.
Square root √Cube root 3
Undoesa square (2nd power)a cube (3rd power)
Hidden index2 (not written)3 (written)
Negative input?not allowedallowed
Sign of outputalways ≥ 0same sign as input
Example√9 = 33−27 = −3

One careful reminder from Lesson 6.2 carries over. The principal square root is single and non-negative: √9 = 3, not ±3 — even though the equation x² = 9 has the two solutions x = 3 and x = −3. The cube root never makes you choose: 327 is just 3, the one and only real number whose cube is 27.

🎮 Try it√ versus ∛ comparator

Feed the same number to both roots — try a perfect square or perfect cube, then flip it negative. Watch √ refuse a negative while 3 accepts it.

Sign
Number
eastmath.com · 6.3 Cubes and Cube Roots · 6.3.4 Square roots versus cube roots