Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.4  Working with Powers

The three rules for working with powers — the toolkit you need before multiplying expressions.

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

Point 2 of 4 in this lesson: 7.4.2 Raising a power to a power

7.4.2 Raising a power to a power

Now a different question: what happens when a power is itself raised to a power, like (a2)3? The outer exponent 3 is still just a counter, and now it is counting copies of the whole inside thing, a2. So write out three copies of a2 and watch what you get.

(a2)3  =  a2·a2·a2  =  (aa)(aa)(aa)  =  a6

Three groups, each holding two copies of a, makes 3 × 2 = 6 copies in all. This time the exponents multiply — and that is no coincidence. You could finish the middle step with Rule 1 (2 + 2 + 2 = 6), but adding the same number over and over is multiplication. A power of a power is repeated grouping, and repeated grouping multiplies the counts.

3 groups, each holding a² (2 copies) → 3 × 2 = 6 copies a a a a a a = a⁶
Three groups of two copies each is six copies — the exponents multiply: 2 × 3 = 6. Compare this with Rule 1, where the groups were laid in a single row and the exponents added.
Rule 2 — a power of a power, multiply the exponents

(am)n = am·n. When you raise a power to a power, keep the base and multiply the exponents. The outer exponent says "make this many copies of the inside," and each copy brings m factors, so you get m repeated n times.

Worked example

Simplify (y4)2.

  1. A power, y4, is raised to the power 2. Rule 2 applies
  2. Keep the base and multiply the exponents: 4 × 2 = 8. two groups of four copies
  3. Answer: y8. check: y⁴·y⁴ = y⁸ by Rule 1
Watch out — don't add here

(a2)3 = a6, not a5. The brackets are the giveaway: a power inside brackets, with another exponent outside, means multiply. Side-by-side powers (Rule 1) mean add. Same digits, different structure, different answer.

🎮 Try itPower of a power: watch the exponents multiply

Set m and n. You build n dashed groups, each holding m copies of a — for m × n copies in all. Compare with the widget above: same digits, but grouping multiplies.

m (inside) 2
n (outside) 3
eastmath.com · 7.4 Working with Powers · 7.4.2 Raising a power to a power