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Estimating Square Roots Guide

This document discusses estimating square roots by rounding down to the nearest perfect square and then choosing a decimal close to the corresponding whole number. It provides examples of estimating the square roots of 20 and 12 to demonstrate this process. First, it shows determining that √20 is closest to 4 and then testing decimals near 4 until finding a good estimate of 4.47. Next, it has the reader estimate √42 and √12 to practice this technique.

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Robert Lewis
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
125 views2 pages

Estimating Square Roots Guide

This document discusses estimating square roots by rounding down to the nearest perfect square and then choosing a decimal close to the corresponding whole number. It provides examples of estimating the square roots of 20 and 12 to demonstrate this process. First, it shows determining that √20 is closest to 4 and then testing decimals near 4 until finding a good estimate of 4.47. Next, it has the reader estimate √42 and √12 to practice this technique.

Uploaded by

Robert Lewis
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unit 1: Square Roots & The Pythagorean Theorem

1.4 Estimating Square Roots

We can estimate the value of √20 by guessing and checking.

1. Figure out what perfect squares are on either side of the number.

2. Decide what whole number it is closest to.

3. Choose a decimal close to the whole number and multiply it by itself.

Ex. √20

1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81 100

1×1 2×2 3×3 4×4 5×5 6×6 7×7 8×8 9×9 10×10

√20

√20 is closer to √16 than it is to √25, so it is closer to the whole number 4.

Choose numbers and try them out!

4.5 =4.5×4.5=20.25 Too big


2

4.4 = 4.4×4.4=19.36 Too small 4.47 is a good estimate for √20


2

4.47 =4.47×4.47=19.98 Close


2

4.48 =4.48×4.48=20.07 Not as close


Try these…

1. What whole number is √42 closest to?

1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81 100

1×1 2×2 3×3 4×4 5×5 6×6 7×7 8×8 9×9 10×10
√42

42 is closer to 36, so √42 is closer to 6.

2. Estimate the √12 to one decimal place.

1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81 100

1×1 2×2 3×3 4×4 5×5 6×6 7×7 8×8 9×9 10×10
√12
3.3 × 3.3 = 10.89 Too small
12 is half way between 9 and 16, 3.4 × 3.4 = 11.56 Closer
so √12 is between 3 and 4. 3.5 × 3.5 = 12.25 Great estimate!

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