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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 6.2.5 Perfect squares and estimating roots

6.2.5 Perfect squares and estimating roots

Some areas "come out perfectly." The numbers 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100, … are exactly the areas of whole-number squares, so their roots are whole numbers. We call them perfect squares. Memorizing the first dozen makes square roots feel instant: 64 = 8, 81 = 9.

But most numbers fall between perfect squares — and their roots are messy (they're irrational, the surprise of the next lesson). You can still pin them down. Take 20. Since 16 < 20 < 25, taking roots gives 16 < 20 < 25, that is 4 < 20 < 5. So the side is between 4 and 5. To refine, test tenths: 4.42 = 19.36 (too small) and 4.52 = 20.25 (too big), so 4.4 < 20 < 4.5. Squeeze again and you get 204.47.

20 sits between the perfect squares: 4 = 16 and 5 = 25. The amber bounds tighten toward 4.47.
Worked example

Estimate 50 to one decimal place.

Bound it. 49 < 50 < 64, so 7 < 50 < 8. It's just barely past 49, so try numbers near 7.
Refine by tenths. 7.12 = 50.41 (a touch too big); 7.02 = 49 (too small). So 7.0 < 50 < 7.1, and since 50 is very close to 50.41, 507.1 (more precisely 7.07).

🎮 Try itSqueeze a root

Pick a number n. The bar traps n between consecutive perfect squares; then nudge the tenths slider to tighten the bound.

n 20
Tenths guess
eastmath.com · 6.2 Squares and Square Roots · 6.2.5 Perfect squares and estimating roots