Stage 5 · Negative & Rational Numbers

5.6  Powers and Mixed Operations

Shorthand for multiplying over and over, the order everyone agrees on, and a first glimpse past the rationals.

For ages 11–13 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 5.6.5 A hint toward real numbers

5.6.5 A hint toward real numbers

Every power can be run in reverse. "What number, squared, gives 9?" The answer is 3, because 32 = 9. That reverse question is a square root, written √9 = 3. When the inside is a perfect square — 1, 4, 9, 16, 25 — the root is a tidy whole number.

But now ask the same of 2: "what number squared is 2?" It sits between 1 (whose square is 1) and 2 (whose square is 4), so the answer is somewhere between 1 and 2. We can chase it with decimals — but watch what happens:

GUESS GUESS² VS 2 1.4 1.96 below 1.41 1.9881 below 1.414 1.999396 below 1.4142 1.99996164 below
The squares creep up toward 2 — 1.96, 1.9881, 1.999396, 1.99996164 — getting closer with every digit but never landing exactly on 2. No terminating or repeating decimal ever will.

This is not just impatience: it can be proved that √2 is not a fraction at all — no pq of whole numbers squares to exactly 2. So √2 is a brand-new kind of number that lives between the rationals, plugging a tiny gap on the number line that fractions leave empty.

0 1 2 3 1²=1 2²=4 √2 ≈ 1.4142… (never ends, never repeats)
√2 is wedged between 1 and 2, just past 1.4 — a real point on the line that no fraction sits on.
Coming up next — Stage 6

Numbers like √2 are called irrational. Together with all the rationals they form the real numbers — the complete, gap-free number line. Stage 6 (Powers, Roots & Real Numbers) builds them properly. For now, just hold the surprise: reversing a humble little squaring can carry you right out of the world of fractions.

🎮 Try itGuess the root of 2

Slide a guess and watch its square. You can get the square as close to 2 as you like — but you will never land exactly on it. That "almost, but never" is the feel of an irrational number.

Your guess 1.400
eastmath.com · 5.6 Powers and Mixed Operations · 5.6.5 A hint toward real numbers