You're talking about "squaring" the number.
When you take a number and multiply it by itself, you've raised it to the power of 2. This is often written as x2
To undo that, you would take the sq. root of the number. This is the same as taking the number to the 1/2 power, that is x1/2there is also a key on your calculator that likely does this. It resembles the long division symbol.
So, if you're finding the number that multiplies to x, you want to find the square root of x. If you have a number and want to find it times itself, then you want to square it.
2
No, because 1 times itself is one, making it not a square number. It has to equal a different number than the number times itself. * * * * * A totally incorrect answer - on two counts. (a) a square number does not have to be different and, (b) even if that were the case, 1 is the square of -1 and -1 is not the same as 1.
An exponent is used to indicate that a number is multiplied by itself a specified number of times. For example, to multiply 4 by itself 9 times, you would write 49.
the number times a number to equal 82 is 41x2 and it equals 82
3
10sqr2
12.2474487
It is: 24
45 times 1
2.297397
The number is one hundred
0.9 multiplied by 1.82 is equal to 1.638. Multiplying a number by another means adding the first number to itself by the times of second number.
14
one.
the square root of the given number
Such a number is called, "The square root of 1".
2