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9 answers

1/p^3

2006-09-24 17:58:57 · answer #1 · answered by alexqr79 2 · 0 0

1 / p ^ 3

2006-09-24 17:58:59 · answer #2 · answered by Jeff S 2 · 0 0

1/p^3

2006-09-24 17:59:36 · answer #3 · answered by bruinfan 7 · 0 0

1/p^3

2006-09-24 17:59:06 · answer #4 · answered by RG 4 · 0 0

Think of a negative exponent as a ticket to the other side of the fraction bar. If there is a number or variable with a negative in the exponent .. either move it down or up depending on where you start.

so p^-3 = 1 / p³

if you start with 1 / p^-3 .. then you would move it up ..

1 / p^-3 = p³

2006-09-24 18:59:55 · answer #5 · answered by TripleFull 3 · 0 0

Any time you see a negative exponent, the equivalent is 1/the value to a positive exponent.

In your example,
p^-3 = 1/p^3

some othe examples:
1/p^-3 = p^3

4p^-3 = 4/p^3

4*x^2*y^-3*z^-4 = 4x^2/(y^3*z^4)

2*(x^2 + y^-3 + z^-4( = 2*(x^2 + 1/y^3 + 1/z^4) =
= 2x^2 + 2/y^3 + 2/z^4

2006-09-24 18:10:47 · answer #6 · answered by schester3 3 · 0 0

X ^ -Y = 1/(X ^ Y)

therefore

p ^ -3 = 1 / p ^ 3

2006-09-25 05:08:06 · answer #7 · answered by michaell 6 · 0 0

A damaging exponent will become valuable once you turn it from numerator to denominator or vice versa. subsequently: r^-3 = a million/r^3 So we've (a million/r^3)^-4. by potential of the policies of exponents, we are able to multiply the three and the -4, giving us: a million/r^-12 purely moving the denominator lower back to the numerator supplies us r^12.

2016-12-18 16:28:12 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

ANS : 1/(p^3)

2006-09-24 18:03:50 · answer #9 · answered by Sherman81 6 · 1 0

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