Powers and Roots

Powers describe repeated multiplication, while roots reverse this process. They are closely linked to simplifying expressions and surds, and understanding these concepts is important for solving problems in GCSE Maths.

Overview

Powers and roots are opposite ideas.

A power tells you how many times a number is multiplied by itself.

A root works backwards and asks which number creates the result.

\( 3^2 = 9 \qquad \sqrt{9} = 3 \)

In GCSE Maths, you need to recognise squares, cubes, square roots and cube roots, and use them accurately in number and algebra questions.

What you should understand after this topic

  • Understand what powers mean
  • Understand what square roots and cube roots mean
  • Understand how powers and roots are connected
  • Evaluate simple powers and roots
  • Understand how this topic links to indices and surds

Key Definitions

Power

A short way of writing repeated multiplication.

Exponent / Index

The small number showing how many times to multiply.

Base

The main number being multiplied by itself.

Square

A number multiplied by itself once, such as \(5^2\).

Cube

A number multiplied by itself twice, such as \(4^3\).

Root

The opposite of a power. It asks which number creates the result.

Key Rules

Square

\( a^2 = a \times a \)

Cube

\( a^3 = a \times a \times a \)

Square root

\( \sqrt{a} \) means the number that squares to make \( a \).

Cube root

\( \sqrt[3]{a} \) means the number that cubes to make \( a \).

Quick Values to Know

Number Square Cube
2 4 8
3 9 27
4 16 64
5 25 125
10 100 1000

How to Solve

Step 1: Understand powers

A power is repeated multiplication written in a shorter form.

\( 2^4 = 2 \times 2 \times 2 \times 2 = 16 \)
The base is 2 and the exponent is 4.
Exam tip: The exponent tells you how many times the base is multiplied.

Step 2: Know squares and cubes

Learn common square numbers and cube numbers to answer quickly.

Square

\(6^2 = 6 \times 6 = 36\)

Cube

\(4^3 = 4 \times 4 \times 4 = 64\)

Step 3: Understand roots

A root is the inverse of a power. It works backwards.

\( \sqrt{49} = 7 \)
\( \sqrt[3]{27} = 3 \)
\(\sqrt{49}=7\) means 7 squared gives 49.
\(\sqrt[3]{27}=3\) means 3 cubed gives 27.

Step 4: Powers and roots undo each other

\( \sqrt{7^2} = 7 \)
\( (\sqrt{36})^2 = 36 \)
Exam thinking: If a power and matching root appear together, they often cancel.

Step 5: Be careful with negative numbers

Brackets change the meaning.
See order of operations for priority rules.

\((-3)^2\)

\(9\)

\(-3^2\)

\(-9\)

Step 6: Estimate roots

If a root is not exact, compare it with nearby square or cube numbers.

\( \sqrt{20} \)
\(16 < 20 < 25\)
So \(4 < \sqrt{20} < 5\).

Step 7: Exam method summary

  1. Identify whether the question uses a power or a root.
  2. Use known square and cube facts where possible.
  3. Check brackets carefully with negative numbers.
  4. Estimate between known values if the root is not exact.
  5. Round only when the question asks for it.

Example Questions

Edexcel

Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics.

Edexcel

Evaluate \( 3^4 \).

Edexcel

Evaluate \( 10^5 \).

Edexcel

Find the value of \( \sqrt{144} \).

Edexcel

Find the value of \( \sqrt[3]{64} \).

Edexcel

Write \( 2^3 \times 2^4 \) as a single power of 2.

AQA

Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, focusing on index laws and accurate simplification.

AQA

Simplify \( a^5 \times a^3 \).

AQA

Simplify \( \frac{x^7}{x^2} \).

AQA

Simplify \( (m^3)^4 \).

AQA

Simplify \( y^6 \div y^2 \).

AQA

A student says that \( 2^3 + 2^3 = 2^6 \).

Tick one box. Yes ☐     No ☐

Give a reason for your answer.

OCR

Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, emphasising reasoning, fractional indices, and problem-solving.

OCR

Write \( \sqrt{49} \) as a power of 7.

OCR

Write \( \sqrt[3]{x} \) in index form.

OCR

Simplify \( 27^{\frac{2}{3}} \).

OCR

Simplify \( 16^{\frac{3}{4}} \).

OCR

Express \( \frac{1}{x^3} \) using a negative index.

Exam Checklist

Step 1

Check whether the question is asking for a power or a root.

Step 2

Expand carefully if needed to understand the power.

Step 3

Use known square and cube numbers where possible.

Step 4

Watch brackets closely with negative numbers.

Most common exam mistakes

Notation

Reading \(a^2\) as \(a \times 2\) instead of \(a \times a\).

Roots

Giving the wrong integer because square numbers were not recognised.

Negative signs

Ignoring the difference between \((-3)^2\) and \(-3^2\).

Calculator rounding

Rounding too early or giving a decimal when an exact answer is possible.

Common Mistakes

These are common mistakes students make when working with powers and roots in GCSE Maths.

Mixing up square and cube

Incorrect

A student confuses squaring with cubing.

Correct

Squaring means multiplying a number by itself once (\(a^2 = a \times a\)), while cubing means multiplying it twice (\(a^3 = a \times a \times a\)).

Misunderstanding index notation

Incorrect

A student thinks \(a^2\) means \(a \times 2\).

Correct

An index tells you how many times to multiply the base by itself. \(a^2\) means \(a \times a\), not \(a \times 2\).

Not recognising roots as inverse operations

Incorrect

A student treats roots as unrelated to powers.

Correct

Roots undo powers. For example, \(\sqrt{a^2} = a\) (for positive values), so roots are the inverse of powers.

Ignoring brackets with negative numbers

Incorrect

A student calculates \(-3^2\) as 9 instead of \(-9\).

Correct

Without brackets, the square applies only to the number: \(-3^2 = -9\). To square the negative fully, write \((-3)^2 = 9\).

Confusing exact and approximate answers

Incorrect

A student gives a decimal when an exact root is required, or vice versa.

Correct

Leave answers in exact form (e.g. \(\sqrt{2}\)) unless the question asks for a decimal approximation.

Try It Yourself

Practise calculating powers, squares, cubes and roots.

Questions coming soon
Foundation

Foundation Practice

Work with squares, cubes and basic roots.

Question 1

Find \(5^2\).

Games

Practise this topic with interactive games.

Games coming soon.

Powers and Roots Video Tutorial

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a power mean?

A power shows how many times a number is multiplied by itself.

What is a square root?

A square root is a number that multiplies by itself to give the original number.

How do I simplify powers?

Use index laws such as adding powers when multiplying and subtracting when dividing.