Why is a number raised to a negative power the reciprocal of that number?

1 Answer
Dec 18, 2014

Simple answer:

We'll do this by working backwards.

How can you make #2^2# out of #2^3#?
Well, you divide by 2: #2^3/2 = 2^2#

How can you make #2^1# out of #2^2#?
Well, you divide by 2: #2^2/2 = 2^1#

How can you make #2^0 (=1)# out of #2^1#?
Well, you divide by 2: #2^1/2 = 2^0 = 1#

How can you make #2^-1# out of #2^0#?
Well, you divide by 2: #2^0/2 = 2^-1 = 1/2#

Proof why this should be the case

The definition of the reciprocal is: "a number's reciprocal multiplied by that number should give you 1".

Let #a^x# be the number.
#a^x * 1/a^x = 1#
Or you can also say the following:
#a^x*a^-x = a^(x+(-x)) = a^(x-x) = a^0 = 1#

Since both of these are equal to #1#, you can set them equal:
#a^x*a^-x = a^x*1/a^x#
Divide both sides by #a^x#:
#a^-x = 1/a^x#

And you have your proof.