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Why can’t you raise 0 to a negative exponent?

User Chimp
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Explanation:

To know this, you first have to know what a negative exponent is. A positive exponent multiplies the base by itself a given amount of times, but a negative exponent makes a fraction with 1 in the numerator and the base and exponent in the denominator. For example:


2^(-2) =
(1)/(2^2) =
(1)/(4)

So let's try to do the same thing with 0 with a negative exponent.


0^(-2) =
(1)/(0^2) =
(1)/(0)

This is a big no-no. You can never have 0 as the denominator since it is undefined. Therefore, you can't raise 0 to a negative exponent.


I really hope this helps you =)

User Tprsn
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