Radical (mathematics)
See radical for other uses of the termIn mathematics, the n-th root or radical of the non-negative real number a, written as
, is the unique non-negative real number b such that bn=a. See square root for the case where n=2.Operations with radicals are given by the following formulas:
To every non-zero complex number a there are n different complex numbers b such that bn = a, so the symbol
cannot be used unambiguously. The n-th roots of unity are of particular importance.









