Square number
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In mathematics, a square number, sometimes also called a perfect square, is an integer that can be written as the square of some other integer; in other words, it is the product of some integer with itself. So, for example, 9 is a square number, since it can be written as 3 × 3. Square numbers are non-negative. Another way of saying that a (non-negative) number is a square number, is that its square root is again an integer. For example, √9 = 3, so 9 is a square number. A positive integer that has no perfect square divisors except 1 is called square-free. The usual notation for the formula for the square of a number n is not the product n × n, but the equivalent exponentiation n2, usually pronounced as "n squared". For a non-negative integer n, the nth square number is n2, with 02 = 0 being the zeroth square. The concept of square can be extended to some other number systems. If rational numbers are included, then a square is the ratio of two square integers, and, conversely, the ratio of two square integers is a square (e.g., 4/9 = (2/3)2). Starting with 0, there are Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): 1 + \lfloor \sqrt{m} \rfloor square numbers up to and including m.
ExamplesThe first 50 squares of natural numbers (sequence A000290 in OEIS) are:
PropertiesThe number m is a square number if and only if one can arrange m points in a square:
The formula for the nth square number is n2. This is also equal to the sum of the first n odd numbers (Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): n^2 = \sum_{k=1}^n(2k-1) ), as can be seen in the above pictures, where a square results from the previous one by adding an odd number of points (marked as '+'). So for example, 52 = 25 = 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 9. The nth square number can be calculated from the previous two by doubling the (n − 1)th square, subtracting the (n − 2)th square number, and adding 2 (Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): n^2 = 2(n-1)^2-(n-2)^2+2 ). For example, 2×52 − 42 + 2 = 2×25 − 16 + 2 = 50 − 16 + 2 = 36 = 62. It is often also useful to note that the square of any number can be represented as the sum 1 + 1 + 2 + 2 + ... + n − 1 + n − 1 + n. For instance, the square of 4 or 42 is equal to 1 + 1 + 2 + 2 + 3 + 3 + 4 = 16. This is the result of adding a column and row of thickness 1 to the square graph of three (like a tic tac toe board). You add three to the side and four to the top to get four squared. This can also be useful for finding the square of a big number quickly. For instance, the square of 52 = 502 + 50 + 51 + 51 + 52 = 2500 + 204 = 2704. A square number is also the sum of two consecutive triangular numbers. The sum of two consecutive square numbers is a centered square number. Every odd square is also a centered octagonal number. Lagrange's four-square theorem states that any positive integer can be written as the sum of 4 or fewer perfect squares. Three squares are not sufficient for numbers of the form 4k(8m + 7). A positive integer can be represented as a sum of two squares precisely if its prime factorization contains no odd powers of primes of the form 4k + 3. This is generalized by Waring's problem. A square number can only end with digits 00,1,4,6,9, or 25 in base 10, as follows:
An easy way to find square numbers is to find two numbers which have a mean of it, 212:20 and 22, and then multiply the two numbers together and add the square of the distance from the mean: 22×20 = 440 + 12 = 441. This works because of the identity
known as the difference of two squares. Thus (21–1)(21 + 1) = 212 − 12 = 440, if you work backwards. A square number cannot be a perfect number. Odd and even square numbersSquares of even numbers are even, since (2n)2 = 4n2. Squares of odd numbers are odd, since (2n + 1)2 = 4(n2 + n) + 1. It follows that square roots of even square numbers are even, and square roots of odd square numbers are odd. Chen's theoremChen Jingrun showed in 1975 that there always exists a number P which is either a prime or product of two primes between n2 and (n+1)2. See also Legendre's conjecture. See also
ReferencesFurther reading
External links
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