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hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
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If cube root is exponentiating to the power of 1/3, square is exponentiating to the power of 1/2. The nth root is taking the exponent of 1/n.
 

Zap Brannigan

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2004
1,887
0
0
Originally posted by: hypn0tik
If cube root is exponentiating to the power of 1/3, square is exponentiating to the power of 1/2. The nth root is taking the exponent of 1/n.

Just read this time to rework the problem...
 

Zap Brannigan

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2004
1,887
0
0
This is fun! I know a ^3 is cubed root but what is a ^4 called?

Going to rewrite this next problem right off as ( a^12 b^4)^1/4
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Originally posted by: Zap Brannigan
This is fun! I know a ^3 is cubed root but what is a ^4 called?

Going to rewrite this next problem right off as ( a^12 b^4)^1/4

There's no special term. Simply the 'fourth root'.
 

Zap Brannigan

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2004
1,887
0
0
Ok now I have to replace the radical with a rational Exponent.

(5th root 2x^3)^3

Did I write that one correctly?
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Originally posted by: Zap Brannigan
Ok now I have to replace the radical with a rational Exponent.

(^5 root 2x^3)^3

Did I write that one correctly?

Nope. That doesn't make any sense.
 

Zap Brannigan

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2004
1,887
0
0
Ok well it looks like this,

( a small 5 sitting on top of the v part of the square root sign, then 2x^3 closed parethesis) ^3
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Originally posted by: Zap Brannigan
I'm thinking it wants 1/5 of 2x^3 first?

When you're exponentiating, it doesn't matter if you decide to cube first and then find the fifth root or find the fifth root first and then cube.

So your problem can be written as:

(2x^3)^3/5
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Originally posted by: Howard
(2x^3)^3/5 = 2^(3/5) * x^[3*(3/5)] (I think)

3*(3/5) is 9/5

Yes, your result is:

2^(3/5) x^(9/5)

2^(3/5) is something you would punch into your calculator.
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Originally posted by: Zap Brannigan
How would I punch that into my calculator? This is all new to me.

Depends on your calculator. Look for it's instruction manual.