Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.5  Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations

Treat √a as a number you can actually compute with — simplify it, combine it, tidy it.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
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Point 1 of 6 in this lesson: 6.5.1 What a square-root expression means, and when it's valid

6.5.1 What a square-root expression means, and when it's valid

Write a and you have named a single number: the non-negative number whose square is a. So 25 isn't an unfinished problem — it is 5, because 5 × 5 = 25. The radical sign is a finished noun, not a verb waiting to run.

Some radicands come out clean. When a is a perfect square — 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, … — the root is a whole number you can write down. Most radicands don't: 7 has no fraction or terminating decimal equal to it (you met that fact in 6.4 — it's irrational). That's fine. We simply leave it as 7: an exact number that sits between 2 and 3, never to be “finished” as a decimal.

There is one rule the radicand must obey. A square is never negative, so “the number whose square is a” can only exist when a ≥ 0. Ask for −4 and no real number answers — nothing real squares to a negative. A real square root needs a radicand that is zero or positive.

The radicand line. To the left of 0 the root is undefined; a perfect square gives a whole-number root; everything else gives an exact root we leave under the sign.
Watch out

9” means the principal (non-negative) root, so 9 = 3 only — not ±3. The equation x² = 9 has two answers, x = 3 or x = −3, but the symbol 9 by itself always points to the positive one.

🎮 Try itIs this root valid — and does it come out clean?

Slide the radicand a. Watch where it becomes undefined, where it lands on a perfect square, and where it stays exact.

Radicand a 12
eastmath.com · 6.5 Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations · 6.5.1 What a square-root expression means, and when it's valid