Exponent Properties
Square & Cube Root Equations
Complex Numbers
100

This is the answer to 3÷ 32?

What is 32 or 9?

100

Solve: √x = 5

What is x = 25?

100

What is i^2?

Answer: -1

200

Rewrite 161/2 as a radical expression and simplify.

What is the square root of 16 (equal to 4)?

200

True or False: √(x^2) = x

False — it's |x| because square roots are always non-negative.

200

Simplify: √(-16)

Answer: 4i

300

Simplify (x2/3)3.

What is x2?

300

Why does x^2 = 9 have two solutions, but √x = 3 only has one?

Squaring allows for positive and negative roots, but the square root symbol only refers to the positive root.

300

Add: (3 + 2i) + (1 - 5i)

Answer: 4 - 3i

400

Why is b1/n = nth root of b1?

Because exponent rules show that raising a number to a fractional power is the same as taking a root. It maintains consistency with integer exponent properties.

400

Solve and explain: √(x + 1) = 2

Square both sides: x + 1 = 4 → x = 3

400

Multiply: (2 + 3i)(1 - i)

Answer: 2 - 2i + 3i - 3(i^2) = 2 + i + 3 = 5 + i

500

Why is a-n = 1/an?

We define negative exponents this way so that the rules of exponents remain consistent, especially the rule:

am * an = am+n

500

Create a radical equation with no solution and explain why.

√x = -3 → No solution, since square roots cannot be negative.

500

Why are complex numbers shown on a plane instead of a number line?

Answer: Because they have both a real part and an imaginary part, so we need 2D space — the complex plane — where the x-axis is real and the y-axis is imaginary.

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