Are 'power', 'index' and 'exponent' exact synonyms

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The terms "power," "index," and "exponent" are related but not exact synonyms; "exponent" is more formal, while "index" is used differently in British and American contexts. "Exponential growth" specifically refers to functions of the form a^x, while x^a represents polynomial, rational, radical, or transcendental functions depending on the value of a. The operation of raising a number to another is called exponentiation, and it can be used generally, not just for e or specific bases. In modeling, functions like f(x) = Cx^a are referred to as power laws. The distinctions clarify the terminology used in mathematics.
Aeneas
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Can you please help me sort out my terminology?

Are 'power', 'index' and 'exponent' exact synonyms, even thogh they tend to be used in different contexts? If a^x gives 'exponential growth' is the growth described by x^a also properly called 'exponential'? If not, what is it called?

Thanks,

Aeneas
 
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I would consider "power" and "exponent" to be basically the same- "exponent" being a little more formal than "power". Our British friends use "index" to mean "exponent" but we Americans do not. To us an "index" is simply a "label" (as on a vector or tensor) and can be either a superscript of a subscript.

"Exponential growth" on the other hand refers to the "exponential function", ex or variations on that such as ax= ex ln(a). Something like xa is a "polynomial function" if a is a positive integer, a "rational function" if a is a negative integer, a "radical function" if a is a fraction, and a "transcendental function" if a is irrational.
 


Note:

Often, in modelling, to utilize a function:
f(x)=Cx^{a}
is called to use a "power law". (C, a constants to be empirically determined).
 


Yes that's the way I refer to them.

f(x) = a^x : an exponential.

f(x) = x^a : a power (of x).
 


Thanks for those replies. Can you use "exponentiation" as a noun, to go with "addition" and "multiplication" for example, to generally describe the general process of raising one number to the power of another, then, or should it be reserved for raising e or some other number to the power of x?

Also, the phrase "exponential growth" is a common one, but what would you put in the bracket in "( ) growth" if the growth was described by, say, a polynomial function?
 


These are the distinctions as I know them:

A "power" is an operation also known as exponentiation, as in the third power of 2 is 8.

The "exponent" is the argument in the superscript of a power - then n in an. It is also the "index" of the power in the same way as n is the index of the radical \sqrt[n]{a}.

For a constant:

f(x) = a^x is an exponential function.

g(x) = x^a is a power function.

I hope this helps.

--Elucidus
 
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