What is #0^0#? (0 to the power of 0)
3 Answers
In elementary mathematics, this is often left undefined.
Explanation:
But with the notion of limits available, we can show that
As a cardinal number,
And for Cardinal numbers
With this definition and the observation that there is exactly one function from
It depends...
Explanation:
A case for
Suppose we define:
#a^n = overbrace(a * a * ... * a)^"n terms"#
for any non-negative integer
Then
This definition is useful in contexts where you are dealing purely with non-negative integer exponents.
A case for indeterminacy
Note that:
#lim_(x->0) x^0 = 1#
#lim_(x->0^+) 0^x = 0#
More generally, let
For
#{ (x_n = a^(-n)), (y_n = -1/n) :}#
Then as
#x_n -> 0#
#y_n -> 0#
and:
#x_n^(y_n) = (a^(-n))^(-1/n) = a#
If instead, we have
#{ (x_n = a^n), (y_n = 1/n) :}#
to get similar results.
If
#{ (x_n = a^(1-2n)), (y_n = 1/(1-2n)) :}" "# if#a < -1#
or
#{ (x_n = a^(2n-1)), (y_n = 1/(2n-1)) :}" "# if#-1 < a < 0#
So according to how we approach the point
This all points towards considering
Explanation:
Anything to the
Therefore,
Hope this helps!