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Welcome to the first of four videos which will go through
some common mistakes that people make in algebraic manipulation
and working with numbers. I've called it a "baker's dozen"
because there are thirteen separate topics covered in the course of these
four videos.
This first video covers what can loosely be called
"reading the recipe correctly", that is can you
understand the mathematics that's being asked of you when it's presented
in the form of a question and there are three typical things that can
cause trouble under this heading. Making sure that you use powers,
indexes correctly, how you deal with
zero powers and also what happens
if you attempt to divide by zero. Let's look at the first one
concerning powers.
A mistake I
see fairly commonly when people are using algebra is this one.
"Minus a squared" does not actually turn out to be
"-a multiplied by itself". Now to see that,
let's look at a situation that's similar
using some simple numbers. Here we have -3 in brackets
and we are squaring it. Now it's pretty clear that what we're being asked to do
here
is square the item that's right next to the power of two
The brackets are indicating that it's the number -3.
So in that case we take -3
multiply it by itself. Two minuses
multiplied together make a plus so we end up with
positive 9. Now compare that to
the statement you see here "-3 squared".
It is tempting to think that the minus is attached to the 3
and therefore we are still squaring the number -3
but the correct way to read this
is to note that it's only the 3
that's right next to the power of 2 and therefor that's the only part
to get squared. So dealing with that we have a minus sign
out the front of 3 multiplied by 3
which will, of course, produce -9. Now what's important
in correcting any mathematical error
is having some kind of strategy, using your other knowledge of mathematics,
to get around a potential problem
when you run into it. Now, in this case what I think it would help
understand how to apply the power correctly to a negative number
is to think of -3 as not just -3,
a point on the number line, but think of it as a product:
-1 multiplied by +3, because we know
that the second item there (-1 times 3)
is going to produce the number -3. So in this case if you replace the "-3"
with "-1 times 3" then it's not so
easy to make the mistake of squaring the -1
because now it looks like the -1 is separate from the 3,
the 3 squared and that's the right way to interpret it.
So now it's pretty clear that it's only the 3 that's getting squared
and we'll get the correct answer. So what we doing here is using
some other knowledge we have about the way numerical manipulation works
to help us overcome a potential problem we might be having
interpreting some mathematical notation, because of course "-3"
and "-1 multiplied by 3" a mathematically the same thing.
So they should obey the appropriate rules.
Here's a little exercise,
four little questions. What you might like to do at this point is
pause the video, have a bit of a think about which one of those
four statements is correct. It might be all of them, it might be none of them.
Have a bit of a think and then restart the video to
see whether you're right.
Here's a second set
of problems that are similar to the previous set. Note this time that we're
raising all these numbers to the power of 3. So feel free to
pause the video and have a think about those ones as well.
And here are the correct
answers.
Item number two out of our
baker's dozen is what happens when you have a power of 0.
Quite often
I see people interpreting any number, a,
raised to the power 0 as equalling 0.
Now this isn't true but it's a natural
mistake to make. When we first learn about powers we learned about
whole number powers like 2 (squaring) or 3
(raising to the power 3, or cubing). Whole number powers
are pretty straightforward but when we start dealing with
powers of 1, 0, negative powers, fractional powers
we have to trade a little more carefully, because their interpretation is a bit
more sophisticated.
For this one a good strategy
is to think about index laws that are more familiar to us.
You might be familiar with the index law
that says a raised to the power m divided by the same base, a,
raised to another power n, is simply
the base a raised to the power of m - n,
the difference between the numerator and denominator powers.
Even if you aren't particularly familiar with that formula,
or that shortcut if you like, a good idea
is to see what's actually going on
underneath the shortcut. So here we have a simple example:
6 raised to the power 5 divided by 6 raised to the power 2.
Clearly what that means is I've got
five 6's on the top line of the fraction multiplied together and
two on the bottom. Now if we saw it like that we might naturally
realize that there are some cancellations possible, that is
two the 6's on the top line cancel two on the bottom.
What that leaves us with is the remaining three 6's on the top line,
or 6 to the power 3. And that's a good way to
remind yourself that the shortcut to get from the beginning of that
series of calculations to the end is simply
to take the difference in the powers and that formula you see above is a
shortcut
that goes through that process for you. Let's see what happens if we
change the problem to a situation where the powers are both the same.
S here I've got 6 to the power 2 over itself.
Now, it's not all that difficult
to see that this fraction
clearly must be 1, either through cancellation or simply by recognizing
that when you take a number and divide by itself you must get 1.
The beauty the index law above
is that it also applies in this situation. So here I'm taking 6 to the power of 2 - 2,
which is, of course,
6 to the power 0 and here we see a practical example
of what a number raised to the power 0 will produce.
Because of the consistency of all the mathematical rules we're using,
6 to the 0 has to equal 1.
So the correct interpretation
of a 0 power is to replace it
with 1. If you have trouble remembering that
you can always go back to simpler rules of mathematics
and derive the logically consistent result.
The third item in our first part of the baker's dozen
is what happens when you divide by 0. Most people have an idea
that something interesting happens when you attempt to divide by 0
but we're not terribly clear about what exactly the implications are.
Now, you've probably seen stated
the division by zero is a process that is
"not defined", which is a tricky concept in some ways.
Most mathematical operations produce something, some kind of number
or formula or expression. Not to be confused, of course,
with taking 0 and dividing it by other numbers.
So "0 divided by 3", which is equivalent to the fraction
"0 over 3" is a perfectly respectable number.
0 is a number, it sits on the number line. It's a defined quantity.
The trouble starts in this situation:
when you attempt to divide any other number by 0.
And the most you can say
about those two statements is a word
"undefined". It's a rare occasion where a mathematical operation
doesn't produce a mathematical answer. Now most of us are aware of
those
restrictions. We're not always aware of
why it's necessary to declare that division by zero
isn't defined, simply not allowed, and
a very good example that convinced me was an algebraic proof.
So here we have a simple
statement, "variable a equals
variable b" and I'm now going to manipulate that
equation using some operations. So firstly I'm
going to multiply both sides by a. So now I have that "a squared equals a times b".
I have also
subtracted b squared from both sides
which produces the equation you see here.
Now both sides of this equation can
be factorised. On the right hand side I have a common factor of b
and on the left hand side I've got the difference two squares.
So factorising both of those produces
these expressions here. I've taken the common factor of b out of the right hand side
and also used the standard method for factorising a difference of two squares.
Now you'll notice that a - b is a common factor
of the left and the right hand side, so I'll divide
both sides by a - b to make the expression
on both sides simpler. Now at the top we stated that a and b
were the same, so I'm its going to replace a with b
and I'll simplify a little bit so that 2b = b,
then I'll divide by b and
I've just shown that 2 is equal to 1. That's bad news.
Mathematically, one of the bedrock principles of all
mathematics is that different numbers
are different. 2 does not equal 1.
And we've performed a series of algebraic steps
that appear to have proved just that.
So the fabric of mathematics is in jeopardy into
we work out what's gone wrong. In fact one of the steps I took in that
proof
was illegal, incorrect. Have a bit of a think for a moment
about which step may be the culprit.
Well, the offending step in this process is that one,
the division by a - b. You've probably done
division by expressions like that several times already in your mathematical
career.
Why is this one wrong? Well the answer is because
we've deliberately stated that a and b are the same.
Therefore, dividing by a - b is inevitably
dividing by 0. Since that step
is not defined then none of the following steps
are allowed. The process is incorrect from that point onwards.
So you get the idea now
that division by 0 has to be not only
declared to be illegal
it must never happen at all and here's a visual
representation what that means
in case you having trouble with the algebra. You allow division by zero to
exist,
you let that slip past you G then a
Kraken will rise from the ocean and drag your ship of mathematics to the bottom
of the ocean.
Now that was a fairly contrived example we just saw.
Here's a more practical problem where division by 0 may turn out to give us
a hard time.
We're asked to solve this equation for x:
"x times (2 - x) equals x squared".
What is the solution or solutions (if any) to that problem?
Well a good way to tackle a problem like this
is to recognize that there's a common factor of x in the left and the right hand side.
So we may as well divide both sides by x to make our job easier.
Now we have that "2 - x equals x".
Rearranging that, putting the x's together,
eventually produces the answer
"x equals 1". So
we might be inclined to claim that the solution to this problem
is that x equals 1 and that certainly is a perfectly satisfactory solution to the
problem.
Substituting x = 1 into that equation at the top
will give you a left and right hand side that are both the same.
But there is a problem with this process.
We divided both sides at the equation
by a variable, x. Remember
a variable x can take any value at all along a number line
which includes 0. So what you should get into the habit of doing when
you're working on a problem like this and you do divide by
a variable or an expression involving variables,
is make sure that you specify
that that expression or variable can't equal 0.
So, in this case, that division of both sides by x is only valid
if we restrict x to values other than 0.
What that means is that so far in our solution to the problem
we have considered possible values of x
from minus infinity to infinity but excluding 0,
which means we haven't tested whether 0 itself
satisfies the equation. So we'd better do that as well.
So we go back to the original equation you see at the top of the screen
and we substitute x equals 0 into it.
Since it's a single value we don't need to do anything particularly
sophisticated
other than work out what the left and right hand side are.
So quite clearly if you put x equals 0 into the left hand side you get 0.
If you do the same thing to the right hand side of that equation, that is
take 0 squared, clearly you also get 0.
What this means is that x equals 0 is also
a solution to this problem, one that was invisible to us
until we checked the value of 0
separately. The reason we had to check 0 separately
was because the algebra we performed earlier
was only valid if x did not did not equal 0.
So the correct answer to this problem is that
x equals 1 or 0 are solutions
to this problem.
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