Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
And now I want to go over some of the other core exponent
properties.
But they really just fall out of what we already
know about exponents.
Let's say I have two numbers, a and b.
And I'm going to raise it to-- I could do it in the abstract.
I could raise it to the c power.
But I'll do it a little bit more concrete.
Let's raise it to the fourth power.
What is that going to be equal to?
Well that's going to be equal to-- I
could write it like this.
Copy and paste this, copy and paste.
That's going to be equal to ab times ab times ab times ab
times ab.
But what is that equal to?
Well when you just multiply a bunch of numbers like this
it doesn't matter what order you're going to multiply it in.
This right over here is going to be equivalent to a times
a times a times a times-- We have
four b's as well that we're multiplying together.
Times b times b times b times b.
And what is that equal to?
Well this right over here is a to the fourth power.
And this right over here is b to the fourth power.
And so you see, if you take the product of two numbers
and you raise them to some exponent,
that's equivalent to taking each of the numbers
to that exponent.
And then taking their product.
And here I just used the example with 4,
but you could do this really with any arbitrary-- actually
any exponent.
This property holds.
And you could satisfy yourself by trying different values,
and using the same logic right over here.
But this is a general property.
That-- let me write it this way--
that if I have a to the b, to the c power,
that this is going to be equal to a to the c times b to the c
power.
And we'll use this to throughout actually
mathematics, when we try to simplify things or rewrite
an expression in a different way.
Now let me introduce you to another core idea here.
And this is the idea of raising something to some power.
And I'll just use example of 3.
And then raising that to some power.
What could this be simplified as?
Well let's think about it.
This is the same thing as a to the third--
let me copy and paste that-- as a to the third times
a to the third.
And what is a to the third times-- So this
is equal to a to the third times a to the third.
And that's going to be equal to a to the 3 plus 3 power.
We have the same base, so we would add
and they're being multiplied.
They're being raised to these two exponents.
So it's going to be the sum of the exponents, which
of course is going to be equal to a-- that's
a different color a-- it's going to be a to the sixth power.
So what just happened over here?
Well I took two a to the thirds.
And I multiplied them together.
So I took these two 3s and added them together.
So this essentially right over here,
you could view this as 2 times 3.
That's how we got the 6.
When I raise something to one exponent,
and then raised it to another, that's
the equivalent to raising the base
to the product of those two exponents.
I just did it with this example right over here.
But I encourage you try other numbers to see how this works.
And I could to do this in general.
I could say a to the b power.
And then-- let me copy and paste that--
and then I'm going to raise that to the c power.
Well what is that going to give me?
Well I'm essentially going to have
to take c of these, so one, two, three.
I don't know how large of a number
c is, so I'll just do the dot, dot dot.
So dot, dot, dot.
I have c of these, right over here.
So what is that going to be equal to?
Well that is going to be equal to a to the-- well
for each of these c, I'm going to have
a b that I'm going to add together.
So let me write this.
So I'm going to have a b plus b plus b plus dot, dot, dot
plus b.
And now I have c of these b's, so I
have c b's right over here.
Or you could view this as a, this
is equal to a to the c times b power.
c or a, you could do a to the cb power.
So very useful.
So if someone were to say what is 35 to the third power,
and then that raised to the seventh power?
Well this is going to obviously be a huge number.
But we could at least simplify the expression.
This is going to be equal to 35 to the product of these two
exponents.
It's going to be 35 to the 3 times 7, or 35 to the 21,
or to the 21st power.