Is it okay to have fractional exponents such as #r^(2/3)# in your answer?

I am supposed to simplify the cube root of #-64r^2x^15#. I have gotten as far as #-4x^5 root(3)(r^2)#. Is this as far as I need to go?

1 Answer
May 10, 2018

It is better to not use #r^(2/3)# as #-4x^5root(3)(r^2)# is already the simplest form and may actually mean something different from #-4x^5r^(2/3)#.

Explanation:

Given:

#-64r^2x^15#

we can note that:

#(-4x^5)^3 = (-4)^3 (x^5)^3 = -64x^(5 * 3) = -64x^15#

So #-4x^5# is a cube root of #-64x^15#.

Real cube roots of real numbers are unique, since #f(t) = t^3# is a one to one function of real numbers.

So #root(3)(-64x^15) = -4x^5#

Similarly, if #root(3)(r^2)# is the cube root of #r^2# then

#(-4x^5root(3)(r^2))^3 = -64x^15 (root(3)(r^2))^3 = -64x^15r^2#

and we can deduce that:

#root(3)(-64x^15r^2) = -4x^5root(3)(r^2)#

One interesting thing to note here is that for any real value of #r#, we have #r^2 >= 0# and hence #root(3)(r^2)# is understood to be a non-negative real number.

What about #r^(2/3)# ?

Whatever it is, it is certainly a cube root of #r^2# in that

#(r^(2/3))^3 = r^((2/3)*3) = r^2#

What about if #r = -1# ?

It is clear enough what we intend by:

#root(3)((-1)^2) = root(3)(1) = 1#

but what does #(-1)^(2/3)# actually mean?

In the context of complex numbers, it can be taken to stand for the principal value:

#(-1)^(2/3) = cos (pi/3) + i sin (pi/3) = 1/2+sqrt(3)/2i#

Some people prefer to use fractional expressions as multi-valued when dealing with complex or negative numbers.

So in at least some cases, the expression #r^(2/3)# is not the same as #root(3)(r^2)#.