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Laws of indices - OCRNegative indices

An index, or power, is the small floating number that appears after a number or letter. Indices show how many times a number or letter has been multiplied by itself.

Part of MathsNumber

Negative indices

Example

\(d^4 \div d^5\).

Dividing indices means subtracting the powers.

\(d^4 \div d^5 = d^{4 - 5} = d^{-1}\). This is an example of a negative index.

But \(d^4 \div d^5\) also equals \(\frac{d \times d \times d \times d}{d \times d \times d \times d \times d}\). Cancelling gives \(\frac{\cancel{d} \times \cancel{d} \times \cancel{d} \times \cancel{d}}{\cancel{d} \times \cancel{d} \times \cancel{d} \times \cancel{d} \times d}\), which gives \(d^4 \div d^5 = \frac{1}{d}\).

So \(d^{- 1} = \frac{1}{d}\).

The rule for negative indices is \(a^{-m} = \frac{1}{a^m}\)

A negative power is often referred to as a reciprocal (\(a^{-m} = \frac{1}{a^m}\) is the reciprocal of \(a^m\)).

Examples

\(p^{-2} = \frac{1}{p^2}\)

\(2^{-3} = \frac{1}{2^3} = \frac{1}{8}\)

\(10^{-2} = \frac{1}{10^2} = \frac{1}{100}\) (you may recognise this notation from standard form)