Gareth56 Posted November 5, 2008 Posted November 5, 2008 Continuing through the algebra book I'm studying I came across this example but cannot decide if it's correct or not. Sorry but I just cannot get to grips with the proper way to present this type of equation on this forum. Hopefully it'll make sense. x^2 y^3 3z^-4 = x^2y^3z^4[/u] 3 Sorry i can't get the 3 directly underneath = x^2y^3z^4 Doesn't it work out that the 3 also comes up to the numerator? Or is it only the z^-4 that comes up if so why does the 3 stay below?
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted November 5, 2008 Posted November 5, 2008 (edited) [math]\frac{x^2y^3}{3z^{-4}} = \frac{x^2y^3z^4}{3}[/math] So yes, you're right. Only the [imath]z^{-4}[/imath] moves up. Remember that [imath]3z^{-4}[/imath] is the same as [imath]3 \times z^{-4}[/imath] -- the negative exponent only applies to [imath]z[/imath], not the 3. Edited November 5, 2008 by Cap'n Refsmmat oops -- LaTeX trouble 1
Gareth56 Posted November 5, 2008 Author Posted November 5, 2008 Many thanks for the clarification. Both of you
DrP Posted November 5, 2008 Posted November 5, 2008 (edited) The 3 would come up if there were brackets around the 3z. i.e. [3z]^-4 meaning the 3 and the z are to the power of -4. But the way you have it the 3 stays on the bottom. i.e. 3z^-4 means that the z only is raised to the power of -4 and the 3 is just what it is. EDIT: Whoops - sorry - you beat me to it. Edited November 5, 2008 by DrP 1
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