Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.7  Dividing Expressions

Running powers and multiplication in reverse: dividing powers, zero and negative exponents, and a first look at factoring.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 7.7.2 Zero and negative exponents

7.7.2 Zero and negative exponents

The subtract-the-exponents rule is so neat that it is worth asking a daring question: what if the bottom exponent is just as big as the top one, or even bigger? The rule does not flinch — it keeps giving answers — and those answers force us to decide what a zero exponent and a negative exponent must mean.

Start with equal exponents. Anything (except zero) divided by itself is 1, so a3 ÷ a3 = 1. But the rule says subtract: 3 − 3 = 0, which gives a0. For the two ways to agree, we are pushed into a single conclusion: a0 = 1.

Key idea — the zero exponent

For any base a that is not 0, a0 = 1. It is not a special new fact we declared by hand — it is the only value that keeps the division rule honest, since an ÷ an is both a0 and plainly 1.

Now keep going below zero. Take a2 ÷ a5. Spelled out, that is two a’s over five a’s; the two on top cancel two on the bottom and leave 3 a’s stuck in the denominator, so the value is 1a3. The rule, meanwhile, says 2 − 5 = −3, giving a−3. Once again both must agree, so a negative exponent must mean a reciprocal.

Key idea — negative exponents

A negative exponent flips the power into the denominator: a−n = 1an  (for a not 0). The minus sign on the exponent does not make the number negative — it tells you to take the reciprocal.

The cleanest way to feel all of this at once is to walk down a staircase, dividing by the base at every step. Each step down lowers the exponent by exactly 1, and the values glide straight through 1 and on into fractions without any jump:

23 = 8 22 = 4 21 = 2 20 = 1 2−1 = ½ 2−2 = ¼ ÷2 ÷2 ÷2 ÷2 ÷2
Using base 2, each step divides by 2 and drops the exponent by 1. The values 8, 4, 2 lead naturally to 20 = 1, then keep halving to 2−1 = ½ and 2−2 = ¼. Nothing was decreed — the pattern forces these values.
Watch out — a negative exponent is not a negative number

2−2 is 14, a small positive number — it is not −4 and not −¼. The minus sign rides on the exponent, where it means "reciprocal," not on the value itself.

🎮 Try it Down to zero and below

Step down the staircase. Start high and divide by the base each step. Watch the exponent fall past 0 while the value glides smoothly into fractions — 20 lands on 1, not by decree but because every step just halves the one before.

Exponent 3
eastmath.com · 7.7 Dividing Expressions · 7.7.2 Zero and negative exponents