How does -2^(5/2) -2^(5/2) = -2^(7/2)?

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SUMMARY

The equation -2^(5/2) - 2^(5/2) simplifies to -2^(7/2) through the application of exponent rules and algebraic manipulation. The expression can be rewritten as 2(-2)^(5/2), leading to the conclusion that -2^(5/2) - 2^(5/2) equals -2^(1 + 5/2) or -2^(7/2). The discussion emphasizes the importance of correctly handling negative signs in exponentiation and provides clarity on notation conventions.

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Homework Statement


How does -2^(5/2) -2^(5/2) = -2^(7/2)?

Homework Equations


I've integrated a problem down to this and I know that the answer is -2^(7/2). Unfortunately, I've forgotten the algebraic steps required to get it into that form.

The Attempt at a Solution


I'm totally lost.
 
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(-2)^{5/2}+(-2)^{5/2}=2(-2)^{5/2}

It might help to think about it like this. We write x=y^{a/b} to mean roughly that x is the number equal to y multiplied together with itself "a/b times". In this sense, how might you think we should write 2(-2)^{5/2}?
 
NihilTico said:
(-2)^{5/2}+(-2)^{5/2}=2(-2)^{5/2}

It might help to think about it like this. We write x=y^{a/b} to mean roughly that x is the number equal to y multiplied together with itself "a/b times". In this sense, how might you think we should write 2(-2)^{5/2}?
Is this logic correct, (-)2^(1+5/2) = (-)2^(2/2)+(5/2) = -2^(7/2)? Can I do that with the negative sign? It doesn't seem like I can.
 
Rosebud said:
Is this logic correct, (-)2^(1+5/2) = (-)2^(2/2)+(5/2) = -2^(7/2)? Can I do that with the negative sign? It doesn't seem like I can.

If the negative sign is outside the power, you can pull it out all together until you're done simplifying. If the negative sign is being raised to a power as well, you must bring it along.

So, if you have the negative signs all out front, and not being raised to a power, then yes, because -x=(-1)\cdot{x}. So what you've done is precisely correct in that case, except for the notation. Writing (-) in any situation doesn't make any sense. We use -n (for some number n) to basically mean less than 0 in the standard ordering of the real numbers (i.e., 3\le\pi etc.). In other words, I would write your answer as:

-2^(5/2)-2^(5/2)=-(2^(5/2)+2^(5/2))=-(2^(1+5/2))=-(2^((2/2)+(5/2)))=-2^(7/2)

Or in TeX

-2^{(5/2)}-2^{(5/2)}=-(2^{(5/2)}+2^{(5/2)})=-(2^{(1+5/2)})=-(2^{(2/2)+(5/2)})=-2^{(7/2)}
 
Last edited:
Rosebud said:
How does -2^(5/2) -2^(5/2) = -2^(7/2)?

NihilTico said:
(-2)^{5/2}+(-2)^{5/2}=2(-2)^{5/2}

NihilTico, what you wrote is different to what the OP has. (-2)^n=(-1)^n2^n while -2^n=-(2^n). The first is a positive number when n is an even integer, and negative when n is odd. It is also a complex number when n is neither of those. The second expression however is always a negative number.

Rosebud said:
Is this logic correct, (-)2^(1+5/2) = (-)2^(2/2)+(5/2) = -2^(7/2)? Can I do that with the negative sign? It doesn't seem like I can.

Yes, that is correct, but you don't need to surround the negative sign in brackets. I'd write it like this:

-2^{5/2}-2^{5/2}
=2(-2^{5/2})
=-2^12^{5/2}
=-2^{1+5/2}
-2^{2/2+5/2}
=-2^{7/2}

But of course when you get more accustomed to the rules, you can skip a lot of these steps.
 
Mentallic said:
NihilTico, what you wrote is different to what the OP has.
Well, yes, I figured that when Rosebud replied with the same notation ;)
 
Thank you both for your time and effort. I can finally go to sleep now, lol.
 

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