The Big Idea
Rational exponents are fractional exponents. They connect exponents and radicals into one unified system.
x1/2=x
A fractional exponent means “take a root.”
Why Does This Make Sense?
Think about the product rule: xa⋅xb=xa+b
What is x1/2⋅x1/2?
x1/2⋅x1/2=x1/2+1/2=x1=x So x1/2 is something that, multiplied by itself, gives x.
That’s exactly what x means.
The Basic Rule
x1/n=nx
The denominator tells you which root to take.
- x1/2=x (square root)
- x1/3=3x (cube root)
- x1/4=4x (fourth root)
Examples:
- 91/2=9=3
- 81/3=38=2 (because 23=8)
- 161/4=2 (because 24=16)
The General Rule
What about xm/n? There are two ways to compute it:
xm/n=nxm=(nx)m
Take the root and raise to the power, in either order.
Tip: Root first is usually easier.
Example: Compute 82/3
The exponent 32 means: cube root, then square.
82/3=(38)2=22=4
Example: Compute 272/3
272/3=(327)2=32=9
Example: Compute 163/4
163/4=(416)3=23=8
Negative Rational Exponents
Combine two rules:
- Negative exponent → reciprocal
- Fractional exponent → root
x−m/n=xm/n1
Example: Compute 8−2/3
8−2/3=82/31=41
Example: Compute 4−3/2
4−3/2=43/21=(4)31=81
Why Bother?
Rational exponents let you use exponent laws on radicals.
Without rational exponents:
x⋅3x= ???
With rational exponents:
x1/2⋅x1/3=x1/2+1/3=x5/6 The exponent laws make everything simpler.