Negative Indices
Now these seem simple enough: you raise a number to a power and it usually means multiplying a number by itself n times.
a3 = a x a x a
All numbers to the power of 1 are themselves, and all numbers to the power 0 are one.
a0 = 1
Easy enough.
But then you can also have negative powers.
a-3
What? You can’t multiply a number by itself a negative number of times!
Well, no, clearly. But you can see how negative powers come about.
It’s to do with the powers rule.
an x am = an+m
You can see this if you write out an and am in full.
an x a-n = an+ -n
= an-n
=a1
=a
Therefore, the negative powers are used to denote reciprocals (the number you multiply n by to get 1 – so 1/6 is the reciprocal of 6 – and it is always 1/n.
So.
33 =27
3-3 = 1/27 (or 1/33 – the reciprocal).
Negative powers are easy to manipulate, they just seem a bit weird until you think that positive powers are going up by multiplying the number by itself:
24 is 2 x 2 x 2 x 2
But if you go down, towards 0, the same process is division by two.
64...32...16..8...4..2..
This continues as you go down below zero:
......2, 1, ½, ¼, 1/8, 1/16......
(21, 20, 2-1, 2-2, 2-3, 2-4)
And you can see that these are reciprocals of the powers of 2.
The same applies for the powers of each number.
Sunday, 11 January 2009
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3 comments:
Thanks. I actually understand it now.
:)
What happens if you do a some like this:
(1/3) to the power of minus 2
Heh.
Piece of piss.
Take the numerator first. 1 to the -2 is 1.
Now the denominator. 3 to the -2 is 1/9.
So you have 1 divided by 1/9
or, using fractional division,
1 x 9/1
ie
9
1/3 to the minus 2 is 9
That was, frankly a piece of piss. I find it harder to undo my zip on a Friday night than to do that.
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