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Can someone please help me with one of the exponent concepts?
Say we have 2 integers a,b
Lets assume this equation
a^x= b*a^13.
Now if we are required to find the value of x, do we need to get rid of b? of can we ignore b and say x=13 directly. Basically my understanding isnt clear even after reading from Manhattan.
Thanks a lot
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block below for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.
Can someone please help me with one of the exponent concepts?
Say we have 2 integers a,b
Lets assume this equation
a^x= b*a^13.
Now if we are required to find the value of x, do we need to get rid of b? of can we ignore b and say x=13 directly. Basically my understanding isnt clear even after reading from Manhattan.
Thanks a lot
Show more
Hi. in the given equation ,b can be ignored only when we are dealing with prime numbers (say a & b, both are prime) and you can directly get the answer. However, with non prime numbers, you can not ignore b. In such cases, you must factorize a & b to prime numbers and then proceed.
I've been working on exponent rules, so here's what I think is happening here...
If we have a^x = b(a^13) and a, b are integers, then we need to know more about a and b to solve for x.
a^x is just a bunch of a's multiplied
eg a^3 = a(a)(a)
So if a^x = b(a^13)
then we know that "b" must equal a^(something); it's the only way that the left side of the equation can be a^x.
If b = 1, then a^x = 1(a^13) so x = 13 If b = 2 then a must also = 2, then we'd have 2^x = 2(2^13) so x = 14 If b = 3, then a must also = 3, then we'd have 2^x = 3(3^13) so x = 14 If b = 9, then a could be 3 or 9 If b = 9 and a = 3, then we'd have 3^x = 9(3^13) = 3^2(3^13) so x = 15 etc.
Can someone please help me with one of the exponent concepts?
Say we have 2 integers a,b
Lets assume this equation
a^x= b*a^13.
Now if we are required to find the value of x, do we need to get rid of b? of can we ignore b and say x=13 directly. Basically my understanding isnt clear even after reading from Manhattan.
Thanks a lot
Show more
No. You cannot ignore b. e.g. \(5^x = b*5^{13}\) Can you say here that x = 13? Absolutely not. Until and unless b is 1, we can say for sure that x is NOT 13.
Say b = 25. \(5^x = 25*5^{13}\) \(5^x = 5^2*5^{13}\) x = 15
Say b = 30. \(5^x = 30*5^{13}\) \(5^x = 6*5^{14}\) \(5^{x-14} = 6\) Now you take log on both sides to figure out the value of x which will not be an integer.
x = 14 + log6/log5
When do we equate powers on left hand side to powers on right hand side independently? When dealing with prime bases and integer powers. Say
\(3^a * 5^{10} = 15^2 * 5^b\) (given a and b are integers) \(3^a * 5^{10} = 3^2*5^2 * 5^b\) \(3^a * 5^{10} = 3^2 * 5^{2 + b}\)
Now we have prime bases on both sides and powers must be integers so we can equate them independently. a = 2 2 + b = 10
If the powers needn't be integers, a and b can take any values. Say a = 1, \(3 * 5^{10} = 3^2 * 5^{2 + b}\)
\(5^{2 + b) = \frac{5^{10}}{3}\)
Now you will take log on both sides and get a decimal value for b.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.