Respuesta :

Divide the radicand into groups of two, starting

from the decimal point and going in either

direction. For rational radicands, add pairs of

zeroes to the right of the decimal point as

needed. If the number is irrational, you already

have an infinite sequence of pairs. Now that the

radicand is marked off in pairs, forget the

decimal point (except in the answer). Call each

new digit of the approximation D, and the

current best approximation of the square root R.

Find the largest integer whose square is less

than or equal to the leftmost group. Since

groups are at most two digits long, the integer

is one digit long: in this case, the leftmost group

is 2, so we begin with D = 1, R = 1.

2 -1 = 1, append the next pair of digits, giving

100.

Find the largest digit D such that D*(20*1+D) is

less than or equal to 100.

(HINT: estimate D by dividing 20*1 into 100 -

this approach might overestimate.)

The result is 4*(20*1+4) = 4*24 = 96, so D = 4, R

= 1.4.

100 - 96 = 4, append next pair of digits, result is

400.

400/(20*14) = 1 + fraction, 1*(20*14+1) =

%3D

1*281, so D = 1, R = 1.41.

400 - 281 = 119, appending next pair yields

11900.

11900/(20*141)

= 4 + fraction, 4*(20*141+4) =

4*2824 = 11296, so D = 4, R = 1.414, etc. etc.

What justifies this?

Suppose we know R, the best N-digit

approximation from this algorithm. Then the

next approximation will be 10*R + D, and D must

be the largest digit that satisfies

10R + D)? = (100R? + 20RD + D² )

(= 100R? + D(20R+ D) < radicand