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 4 of 4 in this lesson: 7.4.4 Choosing the right rule

7.4.4 Choosing the right rule

You now have all three rules. The real skill — the one this whole lesson is building toward — is deciding which one a problem is asking for, because they can appear in the same expression and they look deceptively alike. Before you touch the exponents, read the structure and ask one question:

▸ Are two powers of the same base multiplied side by side? → ADD the exponents (Rule 1).
▸ Is a power sitting inside brackets with another exponent outside? → MULTIPLY the exponents (Rule 2).
▸ Is a product inside brackets raised to a power? → SPREAD the exponent to each factor (Rule 3).

The two traps are mirror images of each other, and they are worth saying out loud. a2 · a3 is not a6 — multiplied bases add, giving a5. And (a2)3 is not a5 — a power of a power multiplies, giving a6. If you can keep those two straight, you have the chapter.

Look at the structure aᵐ · aⁿ side by side, same base ADD → aᵐ⁺ⁿ (aᵐ)ⁿ power inside, exponent outside MULTIPLY → aᵐⁿ (ab)ⁿ product inside, raised to a power SPREAD → aⁿbⁿ
One glance at the structure decides everything. Multiplied? Add. Power of a power? Multiply. Product raised to a power? Spread it to each factor.
Worked example — a mix in one expression

Simplify x2·x3·(x2)2.

  1. Handle the bracket first with Rule 2: (x2)2 = x4. multiply 2 × 2
  2. The expression is now x2·x3·x4 — three powers multiplied. Rule 1 now
  3. Add the exponents: 2 + 3 + 4 = 9. count all the x's
  4. Answer: x9. do the bracket before the row
Watch out — the two look-alikes

a2·a3 = a5 (add), but (a2)3 = a6 (multiply). The brackets are the difference. When in doubt, write one of them out the long way and count — it takes ten seconds and never lies.

🎮 Try itRule chooser

An expression appears. Decide what to do with the exponents — add, multiply, or spread — then see the worked-out result and the reason. Press New expression for another.

 
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