How do you simplify root5( -1)?

1 Answer
Mar 5, 2018

It depends!

Explanation:

The function f(x) = x^5 is continuous and strictly monotonically increasing from RR onto RR.

As a result it is one to one with a well defined inverse that is also continuous, strictly monotonically increasing and one to one from RR onto RR:

f^(-1)(x) = root(5)(x)

This is called the real fifth root.

Note that (-1)^5 = -1

So the real fifth root gives us root(5)(-1) = -1

Complications

Note however, that f(x) = x^5 is not one to one as a complex valued function of complex numbers.

As a result, when you are dealing primarily with complex numbers you will encounter the principal complex fifth root of -1, which is not -1 but:

cos(pi/5) + i sin(pi/5) = 1/4(1+sqrt(5)) + 1/4sqrt(10-2sqrt(5)) i

This is also denoted root(5)(-1)