How do you find a one-decimal place approximation for sqrt 10?

2 Answers
Oct 17, 2015

Use one step of a Newton Raphson method to find:

sqrt(10) ~~ 19/6 ~~ 3.2

Explanation:

To find the square root of a positive number n, choose a first approximation a_0 then apply the following iteration step as many times as you like, to get the accuracy you want:

a_(i+1) = (a_i^2 + n)/(2a_i)

In our case, n = 10 and let a_0 = 3, since 3^2 = 9 is quite close to what we want.

Then:

a_1 = (a_0^2 + n)/(2a_0) = (3^2 + 10)/(2*3) = (9+10)/6 = 19/6 = 3.1dot(6)

So to one decimal place sqrt(10) ~~ 3.2

Oct 17, 2015

Truncate the continued fraction expansion for sqrt(10) to find:

sqrt(10) = [3;bar(6)] ~~ [3;6] = 3+1/6 = 3.1dot(6) ~~ 3.2

Explanation:

The continued fraction expansion for sqrt(n^2+1) is

sqrt(n^2+1) = [n;bar(2n)] = n + 1/(2n+1/(2n+1/(2n+1/(2n+...))))

Now

10 = 3^2 + 1

So

sqrt(10) = [3;bar(6)] = 3+1/(6+1/(6+1/(6+1/(6+...))))

So truncating at [3;6] we find:

sqrt(10) ~~ [3;6] = 3 + 1/6 = 3.1dot(6) ~~ 3.2

If you want more accuracy you can include more terms, e.g.

sqrt(10) ~~ [3;6,6,6] = 3+1/(6+1/(6+1/6)) = 3+37/228 ~~ 3.16228