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  2. Cube root - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_root

    All nonzero real numbers have exactly one real cube root and a pair of complex conjugate cube roots, and all nonzero complex numbers have three distinct complex cube roots. For example, the real cube root of 8, denoted , is 2, because 2 3 = 8, while the other cube roots of 8 are + and .

  3. Cubic field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_field

    Adjoining a root of x 3 + x 2 − 2x − 1 to Q yields a cyclic cubic field, and hence a totally real cubic field. It has the smallest discriminant of all totally real cubic fields, namely 49. [4] The field obtained by adjoining to Q a root of x 3 + x 2 − 3x − 1 is an example of a totally real cubic field that is not cyclic. Its ...

  4. Straightedge and compass construction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straightedge_and_compass...

    Doubling the cube is the construction, using only a straightedge and compass, of the edge of a cube that has twice the volume of a cube with a given edge. This is impossible because the cube root of 2, though algebraic, cannot be computed from integers by addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and taking square roots.

  5. Nested radical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nested_radical

    In the case in which the cubic has only one real root, the real root is given by this expression with the radicands of the cube roots being real and with the cube roots being the real cube roots. In the case of three real roots, the square root expression is an imaginary number; here any real root is expressed by defining the first cube root to ...

  6. Cubic function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_function

    whose solutions are called roots of the function. The derivative of a cubic function is a quadratic function. A cubic function with real coefficients has either one or three real roots (which may not be distinct); [1] all odd-degree polynomials with real coefficients have at least one real root.

  7. Casus irreducibilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casus_irreducibilis

    Casus irreducibilis (from Latin 'the irreducible case') is the name given by mathematicians of the 16th century to cubic equations that cannot be solved in terms of real radicals, that is to those equations such that the computation of the solutions cannot be reduced the the computation of square and cube roots.

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  9. Archytas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archytas

    According to Eutocius, Archytas was the first to solve the problem of doubling the cube (the so-called Delian problem) with an ingenious geometric construction. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] Before this, Hippocrates of Chios had reduced this problem to the finding of two mean proportionals , equivalent to the extraction of cube roots .