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Fraction to a negative exponent
mrkamal
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Hi,
When you raise a fraction to a negative exponent, does that always equal a positive whole number? Please explain why or why not.
Thanks
GMAT 2007
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mrkamal,

The result will depend on the fraction itself. If the fraction is +ve then the result will be +ve, if the fraction is -ve then the result will be -ve too. Here is an example: -

(1/2)^-3 = 1/(1/2)^3 = 8 (+ve)

(-1/2)^-3 = 1/(-1/2)^3 = -8 (-ve)

Hope it helps

GMAT 2007
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Yes, that's very clear.
Thanks a lot!
Dan Bernstein
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Joined: 06 Mar 2007
Posts: 308

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Good explanation!
givemeanid
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GMAT 2007 wrote:
mrkamal,

The result will depend on the fraction itself. If the fraction is +ve then the result will be +ve, if the fraction is -ve then the result will be -ve too. Here is an example: -

(1/2)^-3 = 1/(1/2)^3 = 8 (+ve)

(-1/2)^-3 = 1/(-1/2)^3 = -8 (-ve)

Hope it helps

GMAT 2007


(-1/2)^-4 = 1/(-1/2)^4 = 8 (+ve)

FOr a positive fraction, its always positive. For a negative fraction, it depends on the exponent.
GMAT 2007
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Good point givemeanid. I thought about that too after posting. :) So in all it won't be a positive whole number all the time. But it will depend on the sign of exponential.

GMAT 2007
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"+ve" - I've seen this term used a fair number of times. I must be unitiated - can someone please tell me what this means. same goes for "-ve".

Thanks!
Stacey Koprince
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Joined: 06 Mar 2007
Posts: 2667
Location: San Francisco
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those are shorthand for positive and negative :)
Fraction to a negative exponent
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