Proper use of the neg. exponent?

Silvanoshei

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Feb 18, 2013
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Lets use \(\displaystyle \frac{3}{x}\), if you were to give it a neg. exponent it'd be \(\displaystyle x^{-3}\)?

Or if we had \(\displaystyle \frac{x}{3}\)? That can't be done? Or I'm I reversing this? :(
 
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Lets use \(\displaystyle \frac{3}{x}\), if you were to give it a neg. exponent it'd be \(\displaystyle x^{-3}\)?

Or if we had \(\displaystyle \frac{x}{3}\)? That can't be done? Or I'm I reversing this?

\(\displaystyle \dfrac{3}{x} = 3{x^{ - 1}}\;\& \;\dfrac{x}{3} = {3^{ - 1}}x\)
 
\(\displaystyle \dfrac{3}{x} = 3{x^{ - 1}}\;\& \;\dfrac{x}{3} = {3^{ - 1}}x\)


Whats this operation called? Reference?

So if you had \(\displaystyle \frac{3}{x^{2}}\).... it'd be \(\displaystyle 3x^{-2}\)?
 
Whats this operation called? Reference?

So if you had \(\displaystyle \frac{3}{x^{2}}\).... it'd be \(\displaystyle 3x^{-2}\)? YES

It's not really an operation: it's a definition

\(\displaystyle a \ne 0 \implies a^{-b} \equiv \dfrac{1}{a^b} \equiv \left(\dfrac{1}{a}\right)^b.\)
 
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