Subscribe

Calculating 5th Roots - IN YOUR HEAD!

Multiplying a number by itself (e.g. $ 6 \times 6$, or $6^2 $) is relatively easy. Going back the other way - finding out what number has been squared to get a particular result (or finding the "square root", e.g. $ \sqrt{36} $) - is tougher: you need to either just know the answer or just guess it (and, of course, square it to see if you were right, and then if you're wrong have another guess, informed by the outcome of your first one).

Cubes (the cube of 6 would be written $ 6^3 $, or $6 \times 6 \times 6$, for example) are similarly relatively simple to calculate compared to cube roots (e.g. $ \sqrt[3]{216} $), which also require a bit of trial-and-improvement (if you're working with secondary-school level maths).

Raising numbers to the 5th power (i.e. $ 6^5 $, or $6 \times 6 \times 6 \times 6 \times 6 \times 6$) is, again, fairly easy (though you'll probably need a piece of paper), but working out a 5th root (so, figuring out that $ \sqrt[5]{7776} $ is actually 6) involves quite a bit of guessing, trying, failing, and guessing again.

Except... if you're trying to work out the 5th root of a number that is the result of raising any two-digit number to the power of 5 there's a rather nifty trick that you can use to do it in your head. Indeed, with relatively little practise you'll be able to calculate 5th roots quicker than someone who doesn't know the trick can bash it into a calculator.

I described this trick as part of a 24-hour maths marathon broadcast in October 2020. You can find out more about the event here, but if you'd like to find out how to calculate 5th roots in your head really quickly, watch my section in the player below:



If you'd like me to add a readable description of the trick to this post, please let me know in the comments!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Hi, thanks for commenting. If you feel passionately about anything I've posted, please feel free to make your views known but please take the time to make sure that your comments are rational, considered and suitable for any audience.

Thanks for reading!

Do you like what you're reading?

If you think I'm doing a good job, buy me a coffee and tell me what you want to see more of:

Popular Posts

My Blog List

Blog Archive

Creative Commons Licencing Information

Tom⇒maths by T. Briggs is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 by-nc-sa