The document is a math test for 8th grade students containing 3 sections:
1) Fill in the blanks with information about rational numbers and their reciprocals
2) Solve problems finding squares, cubes, unit digits, and inverses
3) Find rational numbers between values, square and cube roots using factorization and division methods, and the smallest number a value must be divided by to obtain a perfect cube.
The document is a math test for 8th grade students containing 3 sections:
1) Fill in the blanks with information about rational numbers and their reciprocals
2) Solve problems finding squares, cubes, unit digits, and inverses
3) Find rational numbers between values, square and cube roots using factorization and division methods, and the smallest number a value must be divided by to obtain a perfect cube.
The document is a math test for 8th grade students containing 3 sections:
1) Fill in the blanks with information about rational numbers and their reciprocals
2) Solve problems finding squares, cubes, unit digits, and inverses
3) Find rational numbers between values, square and cube roots using factorization and division methods, and the smallest number a value must be divided by to obtain a perfect cube.
1. Zero has __ reciprocal. 2. The numbers __ and __ their own reciprocal. 3. The reciprocal of -5 is __ . 4. The product of two rational number is always a ___ . 5. The reciprocal of a positive rational number is _____.
(B)Solve the following.
1.Find the square of 35. 2. Find the cube of 25 . 3. What will be the unit digit of square root of 272. 4. Multiplicative inverse of 13. 5. Additive inverse of -5 / 9 .
(C)Solve the following.
1. Find the 5 rational number between -1/3 & 4/3. 2. Find the square root by prime factorisation method of 9604. 3. Find the cube root by division method of 5776. 4. Find the cube root by prime factorisation method of 10648. 5. Find the smallest number by which 135 must be divide to obtained a perfect cube .
Calculus Made Easy: Being a Very-Simplest Introduction to Those Beautiful Methods of Reckoning Which are Generally Called by the Terrifying Names of the Differential Calculus and the Integral Calculus