Rational exponents (was: Math Discussion)

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goolalklk
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Homework Statement


(-64)^(3/2)

Homework Equations


None.

The Attempt at a Solution


There is no answer that can be reached and it is supposed not be a real number. I was wondering why that is. How is it that there is no "real" answer to this problem?
 
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goolalklk said:

Homework Statement


(-64)^(3/2)

Homework Equations


None.

The Attempt at a Solution


There is no answer that can be reached and it is supposed not be a real number. I was wondering why that is. How is it that there is no "real" answer to this problem?
##(-64)^{3/2} = [(-64)^{1/2}]^3##
Does that answer your question?
 
Alternatively: (−64)3/2 = √(-64)3

You're right in that there is no real solution. The square root of a negative number is an imaginary number, in which case you must use "i" to express √(-1).

i2 = -1 and √(-1) = i.
 
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goolalklk said:
There is no answer that can be reached and it is supposed not be a real number. I was wondering why that is. How is it that there is no "real" answer to this problem?

The negative sign makes it so that the stated number isn't real.
 
FeDeX_LaTeX said:
The negative sign makes it so that the stated number isn't real.
Not exactly.

Real numbers can be positive or negative. However, taking the square root of a negative number does not give a real number result. Instead, imaginary numbers were invented to overcome this problem. The imaginary unit i is defined such that i2 = -1.