What is the square root of 5?

2 Answers
Mar 14, 2018

The square root of 5 can't be simplified father than it already is, so here is sqrt5 to ten decimal places:

sqrt5~~2.2360679775...

Mar 14, 2018

sqrt(5) = 2+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+...))))) ~~ 2889/1292 ~~ 2.236068 is an irrational number.

Explanation:

All positive numbers normally have two square roots, a positive one and a negative of the same size. We denote the positive (a.k.a. principal) square root of n by sqrt(n).

A square root of a number n is a number x such that x^2 = n. So if x^2 = n then also (-x)^2 = n.

However, popular usage is that "the square root" refers to the positive one.

Suppose we have a positive number x which satisfies:

x = 2+1/(2+x)

Then multiplying both sides by (2+x) we get:

x^2+2x = 2x+5

Then subtracting 2x from both sides we get:

x^2=5

So we have found:

sqrt(5) = 2+1/(2+sqrt(5))

color(white)(sqrt(5)) = 2+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+1/(4+...)))))

SInce this continued fraction does not terminate, we can tell that sqrt(5) cannot be represented as a terminating fraction - i.e. a rational number. So sqrt(5) is an irrational number a little smaller than 2 1/4 = 9/4. For better rational approximations you can terminate the continued fraction after more terms.

For example:

sqrt(5) ~~ 2+1/(4+1/4) = 2+4/17 = 38/17 ~~ 2.235

Unpacking these continued fractions can be a little tedious, so I generally prefer to use a different method, namely the limiting ratio of an integer sequence defined recursively.

Define a sequence by:

{ (a_0 = 0), (a_1 = 1), (a_(n+2) = 4a_(n+1)+a_n) :}

The first few terms are:

0, 1, 4, 17, 72, 305, 1292, 5473

The ratio between terms will tend to 2+sqrt(5).

So we find:

sqrt(5) ~~ 5473/1292 - 2 = 2889/1292 ~~ 2.236068