3 Applications of Square and Square Roots in Daily Life
This article will talk about the squares and square roots and fun methods to learn about them. A square root of a number is defined as a value, when multiplied by itself, yields the original number. Examples of square roots are 9 = 3,16 = 4,25 = 5, etc. When we multiply 3 by itself, we get 9; thus, the square root of 9 is 3. Similarly, 4 is the square root of 16. We get the square of a number when we multiply the number by itself. For example, 3*3 = 32 = 9, 4*4 = 42 = 16 etc. Thus, the square of 3 is 9. So we can say that the square root of 9 is 3 whereas the square of 3 is 9. Based on the same concept, if we multiply the same number thrice, we get its cube. Example, 3*3*3 = 27. Also, the cube root of 27 will be 3.
History
Between 1800 BC and 1600 BC, the Yale Babylonian Collection YBC 7289 clay tablet was created that spoke about the square root of two. A copy of the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus from 1650 BC shows how Egyptians used an inverse proportion method to extract square roots. In India, the Sulba Sutras that were dated around 800 – 500 BC used the knowledge of squares and squares roots. Good approximations of the square roots of 2 and 3 can be found in these texts. Greek and Chinese Mathematicians also conducted extensive research on these concepts as well as the irrationality of numbers. As time progressed, many extraordinary minds came together to give us the concept of square roots and squares as we know them today.
Applications of Squares and Square Roots
- When you go to find a new apartment, you will want to know the size of it. Newspaper and online advertisements usually give the dimensions of the apartment by only listing its area, such as 625 square feet. This can become hard to visualize. However, if you use the concept of square roots and convert this number in the form of 25*25 square feet, it gives you a better idea of how big the apartment is. Using cube roots can provide a more precise dimension of the apartment.
- Square roots are also used to find the period of a pendulum.
- Squares and square roots are used in the Pythagoras theorem. Say you have an erect vertical pole, and you want to find the shadow it casts on the ground. By determining a few quantities and applying this theorem, you can quickly determine the length of the pole’s shadow on the ground.
The concept of squares and square roots are used in all walks of life, such as carpentry, engineering, designing buildings, and technology.
Methods to Study
- Practice Questions – To master this subject, it is highly recommended that you solve several practice sums. These questions should be wide-ranging and have an increasing level of difficulty.
- Visual Aids – While studying any topic, it is best to use visual aids such as videos, movies, interactive apps, and simulations. This enables you to retain the concept faster and apply it easily to practical problems.
- External help – It is best to avail the services of a reliable institution such as Cuemath to help with your studying process. Cuemath uses several resources to help students in developing strong foundational concepts in Mathematical topics.
Conclusion
There are several applications of square roots in daily life. Hopefully, this article gave you an insight into the concept of squares and how to use them.
Marc Berman says:
FROM CBS
CBS SWEEPS FRIDAY AS ALL THREE DRAMAS
POST WEEK-TO-WEEK GROWTH
“Hawaii Five-0” Tops the Night in A18-49 with Growth of +20%,
Up +10% in Viewers
“Macgyver” Up +22% in A18-49
“Blue Bloods” Tops the Night in Viewers
· At 8:00 PM, MACGYVER was first in viewers (7.60m, up +5% from 7.27m), A18-49 (1.1, tie, up +22% from 0.9) and A25-54 (1.5, up +7% from 1.4).
· At 9:00 PM, HAWAII FIVE-0 was first in viewers (9.38m, up +10% from 8.50m), A18-49 (1.2, up +20% from 1.0) and A25-54 (1.8, up +13% from 1.6). HAWAII FIVE-0 was Friday’s top program in A18-49.
· At 10:00 PM, BLUE BLOODS was first in viewers (9.61m, up +8% from 8.88m), A 18-49 (1.1, nc) and A25-54 (1.8, up +13% from 1.6). BLUE BLOODS was the night’s top program in viewers.
· For the night, CBS was first in viewers (8.86m), A18-49 (1.1) and A25-54 (1.7). CBS has won every Friday against regularly scheduled competition.
Marc Berman says:
FROM NBC
“Dateline NBC” (1.0/4 in 18-49, 1.4 in adults 25-54, 4.8 million viewers overall from 9-11 p.m. ET):
· Equals its season high in 18-49.
· Matches the show’s highest 18-49 rating since Sept. 9 (1.2).
· Grows +11% week to week in 18-49 (1.0 vs. 0.9), +8% in adults 25-54 (1.4 vs. 1.3) and +9% in total viewers (4.773 million vs. 4.378 million).
· Ties as the #1 show of the night on the Big 4 networks in women 18-49 (with a 1.3 rating).
· In the two-hour time period, ranks #2 among the Big 4 networks in adults 18-49, adults 25-54 (tie) and total viewers.
· For its second hour from 10-11 p.m., ranks #2 among ABC, CBS and NBC in adults 18-49, adults 25-54 and total viewers, ties for #1 in women 18-34 and ranks #1 outright among those nets in women 18-49, outscoring ABC’s “20/20” head to head in every key measure except men 18-34, where the two shows tied.
· Will add substantial viewership via time-shifting – “Dateline” is growing by +29% this season in 18-49 rating (from a 0.94 to a 1.21) and 1.1 million viewers overall (4.8 million to 5.9 million) going from L+SD to L+7.
· Upscale: “Dateline” is generating a solid upscale audience, indexing at a 107 among adults 18-49 living in homes with $100K+ incomes.
“Caught on Camera With Nick Cannon” (0.6/3 in 18-49, 2.7 million viewers overall from 8-9 p.m. ET):
· Retains 100% week to week in 18-49 (0.6 vs. 0.6) and grows in total viewers (2.736 million vs. 2.722 million).
· Maintains a 0.6 rating in 18-49 for a sixth consecutive original telecast.
In Late-Night Metered Markets Friday Night:
· In Nielsen’s 56 metered markets, household results were: “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” 2.6/6; “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” 2.1/5; and ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” 1.8/5 with an encore.
· In the 25 markets with Local People Meters, adult 18-49 results were: “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” 0.8/4; “Late Show,” 0.4/2; and “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” 0.5/3, with an encore.
· From 12:35-1:05 a.m. ET, ABC’s “Nightline” averaged a 1.6/5 in metered-market households and a 0.4/3 in 18-49 in the Local People Meters.
· From 12:35-1:35 a.m. ET, ratings were: “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” 1.3/4 in metered-market households with an encore; CBS’s “Late Late Show,” 1.1/4 with an encore. In the 25 markets with Local People Meters, averages were: “Late Night,” 0.5/3 in 18-49 with an encore; “Late Late Show,” 0.3/2 with an encore.
· At 1:35 a.m., “Last Call with Carson Daly” averaged a 0.8/3 in metered-market households with an encore and a 0.3/2 in adults 18-49 in the 25 markets with local people meters.
NOTE: Primetime results are based on “fast affiliate time period” data from Nielsen Media Research. All ratings are “live plus same day” unless otherwise indicated.
Louis says:
I think Dr. Ken should be a loser, as well.
renamoretti1 says:
It is. 🙂
SonOfTheBronx says:
Friday Final Nationals: NBA Doubleheader on ESPN Rises 63 Percent in Viewership from Year-Ago Night https://programmingins.wpengine.com/?p=12569
renamoretti1 says:
Congratulations Mark Pedowitz (and team)!!!
I knew you could do it!!!!
Here’s to 15 more years of even lower ratings!!
On a side note it is important to realize those results came out of the courageous renewal of two certified flops by the team. Many networks have since copied the flop-renewal approach but none is as good as the CW!!!
And a real congrats to Marc for daring to point this out. I doubt you’d read it anywhere else.