Class VIII Mathematics

Chapter 6: Cubes and Cube Roots

Standard NCERT & CBSE aligned study curriculum. Master concepts, track accuracy, revise weak areas, and challenge yourself with 9 customized practice modes.

Chapter Overview

Welcome to Class VIII Mathematics: Cubes and Cube Roots. This chapter forms a core structural component of the math syllabus, designed to build analytical rigor and key formula models.

Use the detailed subtopic guide below to review standard definitions, key mathematical rules, and study guidelines.

Prerequisite Concepts

Squares and Square Roots

Detailed Subtopics Study Guide

Review detailed conceptual explanations, mathematical equations, and guidelines for each subtopic in this chapter:

1Properties of cube numbers

Concept Explanation

Cubes are numbers raised to the power 3. Odd numbers have odd cubes; even numbers have even cubes.

Mathematical Representation
n^3 = n \times n \times n
Study Guideline: The cube of a negative number is always negative (e.g. (-3)³ = -27).

2Prime factorization cube roots

Concept Explanation

Find cube roots by factoring a number, grouping prime factors into triplets (groups of three), and multiplying one factor from each triplet.

Mathematical Representation
\sqrt[3]{x^3} = x, \quad \sqrt[3]{p_1^{3a_1}} = p_1^{a_1}
Study Guideline: Each prime factor must appear in multiples of three for the number to be a perfect cube.

3Hardy-Ramanujan numbers

Concept Explanation

Hardy-Ramanujan numbers are numbers that can be expressed as the sum of two cubes in two different ways. The smallest such number is 1729.

Mathematical Representation
Ta(2) = 1729 = 1^3 + 12^3 = 9^3 + 10^3
Study Guideline: Also known as taxi-cab numbers, they are a famous topic in number theory.