Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.2  Squares and Square Roots

Given a side, find the area — then turn it around: given the area, find the side.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 6.2.2 Taking a square root: from area back to side

6.2.2 Taking a square root: from area back to side

Now flip the question. A friend says, "my square rug covers 9 square feet — how long is each side?" You are no longer given the side and asked for the area; you are given the area and asked for the side. You need a number that, when squared, gives back 9. That number is 3, because 32 = 9.

Written as an equation, you are solving x2 = 9 — "what number, squared, makes nine?" This undoing of a square is called taking the square root, and it gets its own symbol, the radical sign  . The little roof over the number is the vinculum; it tells you exactly which area is going under the root. So 9 is read "the square root of nine" and asks: what side gives area nine?

The square root reads the picture backward: from area = 9 it recovers the side = 3. So 9 = 3.
Worked example

Each square root is a "what side?" question. Find the side whose square is the area.

16 = 4, because 42 = 16.
49 = 7, because 72 = 49.
1 = 1 and 0 = 0  (a side of length 0 makes a square of area 0).

🎮 Try itReverse finder: hunt the side

Pick a target area (a perfect square), then step the side until side2 matches the area. When it locks, the root is revealed.

Target area 9
Your side 2
eastmath.com · 6.2 Squares and Square Roots · 6.2.2 Taking a square root: from area back to side