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[[File:Expo02.svg|thumb|Graphs of for various bases :

Each curve passes through the point because any nonzero number raised to the power of is . At , the value of equals the base because any number raised to the power of is the number itself.]]

In , exponentiation, denoted , is an operation involving two numbers: the base, , and the exponent or power, . When is a positive , exponentiation corresponds to repeated of the base: that is, is the product of multiplying bases: b^n = \underbrace{b \times b \times \dots \times b \times b}_{n \text{ times}}.In particular, b^1=b.

The exponent is usually shown as a to the right of the base as or in computer code as b^n. This is often read as " to the power "; it may also be referred to as " raised to the th power", "the th power of ", or, most briefly, " to the ".

The above definition of b^n immediately implies several properties, in particular the multiplication rule:There are three common notations for : x\times y is most commonly used for explicit numbers and at a very elementary level; xy is most common when variables are used; x\cdot y is used for emphasizing that one talks of multiplication or when omitting the multiplication sign would be confusing.

\begin{align} b^n \times b^m & = \underbrace{b \times \dots \times b}_{n \text{ times}} \times \underbrace{b \times \dots \times b}_{m \text{ times}} \\1ex & = \underbrace{b \times \dots \times b}_{n+m \text{ times}} \ =\ b^{n+m} . \end{align}

That is, when multiplying a base raised to one power times the same base raised to another power, the powers add. Extending this rule to the power zero gives b^0 \times b^n = b^{0+n} = b^n, and, where is non-zero, dividing both sides by b^n gives b^0 = b^n / b^n = 1. That is the multiplication rule implies the definition b^0=1. A similar argument implies the definition for negative integer powers: b^{-n} = 1/b^n.That is, extending the multiplication rule gives b^{-n} \times b^n = b^{-n+n} = b^0 = 1 . Dividing both sides by b^n gives b^{-n} = 1 / b^n. This also implies the definition for fractional powers: b^{n/m} = \sqrtm{b^n}.For example, b^{1/2} \times b^{1/2} = b^{1/2 \,+\, 1/2} = b^1 = b , meaning (b^{1/2})^2 = b , which is the definition of square root: b^{1/2} = \sqrt{b} .

The definition of exponentiation can be extended in a natural way (preserving the multiplication rule) to define b^x for any positive real base b and any real number exponent x. More involved definitions allow base and exponent, as well as certain types of matrices as base or exponent.

Exponentiation is used extensively in many fields, including , , , , and , with applications such as compound interest, population growth, chemical reaction kinetics, behavior, and public-key cryptography.


Etymology
The term exponent originates from the exponentem, the present participle of exponere, meaning "to put forth". The term power () is a mistranslation
(2025). 9781470415549, American Mathematical Society. .
(1978). 9789027708199, D. Reidel. .
of the δύναμις ( dúnamis, here: "amplification") used by the Greek mathematician for the square of a line, following Hippocrates of Chios.

The word exponent was coined in 1544 by Michael Stifel. In the 16th century, used the terms "square", "cube", "zenzizenzic" (), "sursolid" (fifth), "zenzicube" (), "second sursolid" (), and "" (). "Biquadrate" has been used to refer to the fourth power as well.


History
In The Sand Reckoner, proved the law of exponents, , necessary to manipulate powers of . Archimedes. (2009). THE SAND-RECKONER. In T. Heath (Ed.), The Works of Archimedes: Edited in Modern Notation with Introductory Chapters (Cambridge Library Collection - Mathematics, pp. 229-232). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. . He then used powers of to estimate the number of grains of sand that can be contained in the universe.

In the 9th century, the Persian mathematician used the terms مَال ( māl, "possessions", "property") for a square—the Muslims, "like most mathematicians of those and earlier times, thought of a squared number as a depiction of an area, especially of land, hence property"—and كَعْبَة ( , "cube") for a cube, which later Islamic mathematicians represented in mathematical notation as the letters mīm (m) and kāf (k), respectively, by the 15th century, as seen in the work of Abu'l-Hasan ibn Ali al-Qalasadi. used a form of exponential notation in the 15th century, for example to represent . This was later used by Henricus Grammateus and in the 16th century. In the late 16th century, Jost Bürgi would use Roman numerals for exponents in a way similar to that of Chuquet, for example for .

In 1636, James Hume used in essence modern notation, when in L'algèbre de Viète he wrote for . Early in the 17th century, the first form of our modern exponential notation was introduced by René Descartes in his text titled La Géométrie; there, the notation is introduced in Book I. (And , or , in order to multiply by itself; and , in order to multiply it once more by , and thus to infinity).

Some mathematicians (such as Descartes) used exponents only for powers greater than two, preferring to represent squares as repeated multiplication. Thus they would write , for example, as .

introduced the term indices in 1696. The term involution was used synonymously with the term indices, but had declined in usageThe most recent usage in this sense cited by the OED is from 1806 (). and should not be confused with its more common meaning.

In 1748, introduced variable exponents, and, implicitly, non-integer exponents by writing:


20th century
As calculation was mechanized, notation was adapted to numerical capacity by conventions in exponential notation. For example introduced floating-point arithmetic in his 1938 computer Z1. One register contained representation of leading digits, and a second contained representation of the exponent of 10. Earlier Leonardo Torres Quevedo contributed Essays on Automation (1914) which had suggested the floating-point representation of numbers. The more flexible decimal floating-point representation was introduced in 1946 with a Bell Laboratories computer. Eventually educators and engineers adopted scientific notation of numbers, consistent with common reference to order of magnitude in a .Janet Shiver & Terri Wiilard " Scientific notation: working with orders of magnitude from

For instance, in 1961 the School Mathematics Study Group developed the notation in connection with units used in the .School Mathematics Study Group (1961) Mathematics for Junior High School, volume 2, part 1, Yale University PressCecelia Callanan (1967) "Scientific Notation", The Mathematics Teacher 60: 252–6 JSTOR

Exponents also came to be used to describe units of measurement and quantity dimensions. For instance, since is mass times acceleration, it is measured in kg m/sec2. Using M for mass, L for length, and T for time, the expression M L T–2 is used in dimensional analysis to describe force.Edwin Bidwell Wilson (1920) Theory of Dimensions, chapter 11 in Aeronautics: A Class Text, via Internet Archive


Terminology
The expression is called "the square of " or " squared", because the area of a square with side-length is . (It is true that it could also be called " to the second power", but "the square of " and " squared" are more traditional)

Similarly, the expression is called "the cube of " or " cubed", because the volume of a cube with side-length is .

When an exponent is a , that exponent indicates how many copies of the base are multiplied together. For example, . The base appears times in the multiplication, because the exponent is . Here, is the 5th power of 3, or 3 raised to the 5th power.

The word "raised" is usually omitted, and sometimes "power" as well, so can be simply read "3 to the 5th", or "3 to the 5".


Integer exponents
The exponentiation operation with integer exponents may be defined directly from elementary arithmetic operations.


Positive exponents
The definition of the exponentiation as an iterated multiplication can be by using induction,
(2025). 9781466567061, CRC Press. .
and this definition can be used as soon as one has an multiplication:

The base case is

b^1 = b
and the recurrence is
b^{n+1} = b^n \cdot b.

The associativity of multiplication implies that for any positive integers and ,

b^{m+n} = b^m \cdot b^n,
and
(b^m)^n=b^{mn}.


Zero exponent
As mentioned earlier, a (nonzero) number raised to the power is :
(2025). 9780831130862, Industrial Press. .
b^0=1.

This value is also obtained by the convention, which may be used in every algebraic structure with a multiplication that has an identity. This way the formula

b^{m+n}=b^m\cdot b^n
also holds for n=0.

The case of is controversial. In contexts where only integer powers are considered, the value is generally assigned to but, otherwise, the choice of whether to assign it a value and what value to assign may depend on context.


Negative exponents
Exponentiation with negative exponents is defined by the following identity, which holds for any integer and nonzero :
b^{-n} = \frac{1}{b^n}.
Raising 0 to a negative exponent is undefined but, in some circumstances, it may be interpreted as infinity (\infty).
(1994). 9789401735964, Springer Netherlands.

This definition of exponentiation with negative exponents is the only one that allows extending the identity b^{m+n}=b^m\cdot b^n to negative exponents (consider the case m=-n).

The same definition applies to invertible elements in a multiplicative , that is, an algebraic structure, with an associative multiplication and a multiplicative identity denoted (for example, the of a given dimension). In particular, in such a structure, the inverse of an invertible element is standardly denoted x^{-1}.


Identities and properties
The following identities, often called , hold for all integer exponents, provided that the base is non-zero:
\begin{align}
          b^m \cdot b^n &= b^{m + n} \\
 \left(b^m\right)^n &= b^{m \cdot n} \\
      b^n \cdot c^n &= (b \cdot c)^n
     
\end{align}

Unlike addition and multiplication, exponentiation is not : for example, 2^3 = 8, but reversing the operands gives the different value 3^2=9. Also unlike addition and multiplication, exponentiation is not : for example, , whereas . Without parentheses, the conventional order of operations for serial exponentiation in superscript notation is top-down (or right-associative), not bottom-up (or left-associative). That is,

b^{p^q} = b^{\left(p^q\right)},
which, in general, is different from
\left(b^p\right)^q = b^{p q} .


Powers of a sum
The powers of a sum can normally be computed from the powers of the summands by the
(a+b)^n=\sum_{i=0}^n \binom{n}{i}a^ib^{n-i}=\sum_{i=0}^n \frac{n!}{i!(n-i)!}a^ib^{n-i}.

However, this formula is true only if the summands commute (i.e. that ), which is implied if they belong to a structure that is commutative. Otherwise, if and are, say, of the same size, this formula cannot be used. It follows that in , many involving integer exponents must be changed when the exponentiation bases do not commute. Some general purpose computer algebra systems use a different notation (sometimes instead of ) for exponentiation with non-commuting bases, which is then called non-commutative exponentiation.


Combinatorial interpretation
For nonnegative integers and , the value of is the number of functions from a set of elements to a set of elements (see cardinal exponentiation). Such functions can be represented as - from an -element set (or as -letter words from an -letter alphabet). Some examples for particular values of and are given in the following table:

0 = 0
1 = 1(1, 1, 1, 1)
2 = 8(1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 2), (1, 2, 1), (1, 2, 2), (2, 1, 1), (2, 1, 2), (2, 2, 1), (2, 2, 2)
3 = 9(1, 1), (1, 2), (1, 3), (2, 1), (2, 2), (2, 3), (3, 1), (3, 2), (3, 3)
4 = 4(1), (2), (3), (4)
5 = 1()


Particular bases

Powers of ten
In the base ten () number system, integer powers of are written as the digit followed or preceded by a number of zeroes determined by the sign and magnitude of the exponent. For example, and .

Exponentiation with base is used in scientific notation to denote large or small numbers. For instance, (the speed of light in vacuum, in metres per second) can be written as and then as .

based on powers of are also used to describe small or large quantities. For example, the prefix means , so a kilometre is .


Powers of two
The first negative powers of have special names: 2^{-1}is a ; 2^{-2} is a quarter.

Powers of appear in , since a set with members has a , the set of all of its , which has members.

Integer powers of are important in . The positive integer powers give the number of possible values for an - integer ; for example, a may take different values. The binary number system expresses any number as a sum of powers of , and denotes it as a sequence of and , separated by a , where indicates a power of that appears in the sum; the exponent is determined by the place of this : the nonnegative exponents are the rank of the on the left of the point (starting from ), and the negative exponents are determined by the rank on the right of the point.


Powers of one
Every power of one equals: .


Powers of zero
For a positive exponent , the th power of zero is zero: . For a negative exponent, 0^{-n}=1/0^n=1/0 is undefined.

In some contexts (e.g., ), the expression is defined to be equal to 1; in others (e.g., analysis), it is often undefined.


Powers of negative one
Since a negative number times another negative is positive, we have:
(-1)^n = \left\{\begin{array}{rl} 1 & \text{for even } n, \\ -1 & \text{for odd } n. \\ \end{array}\right.
Because of this, powers of are useful for expressing alternating . For a similar discussion of powers of the complex number , see .


Large exponents
The limit of a sequence of powers of a number greater than one diverges; in other words, the sequence grows without bound:
as when

This can be read as " b to the power of n tends to +∞ as n tends to infinity when b is greater than one".

Powers of a number with less than one tend to zero:

as when

Any power of one is always one:

for all for

Powers of a negative number b\leq -1 alternate between positive and negative as alternates between even and odd, and thus do not tend to any limit as grows.

If the exponentiated number varies while tending to as the exponent tends to infinity, then the limit is not necessarily one of those above. A particularly important case is

as

See below.

Other limits, in particular those of expressions that take on an indeterminate form, are described in below.


Power functions
Real functions of the form f(x) = cx^n, where c \ne 0, are sometimes called power functions.
(2025). 9780134439020, Pearson.
When n is an and n \ge 1, two primary families exist: for n even, and for n odd. In general for c > 0, when n is even f(x) = cx^n will tend towards positive infinity with increasing x, and also towards positive infinity with decreasing x. All graphs from the family of even power functions have the general shape of y=cx^2, flattening more in the middle as n increases.
(2025). 9780470647691, John Wiley & Sons. .
Functions with this kind of are called .

When n is odd, f(x)'s behavior reverses from positive x to negative x. For c > 0, f(x) = cx^n will also tend towards positive infinity with increasing x, but towards negative infinity with decreasing x. All graphs from the family of odd power functions have the general shape of y=cx^3, flattening more in the middle as n increases and losing all flatness there in the straight line for n=1. Functions with this kind of symmetry are called .

For c < 0, the opposite asymptotic behavior is true in each case.


Table of powers of decimal digits
1


Rational exponents
If is a nonnegative , and is a positive integer, x^{1/n} or \sqrtnx denotes the unique nonnegative real of , that is, the unique nonnegative real number such that y^n=x.

If is a positive real number, and \frac pq is a , with and integers, then x^{p/q} is defined as

x^\frac pq= \left(x^p\right)^\frac 1q=(x^\frac 1q)^p.
The equality on the right may be derived by setting y=x^\frac 1q, and writing (x^\frac 1q)^p=y^p=\left((y^p)^q\right)^\frac 1q=\left((y^q)^p\right)^\frac 1q=(x^p)^\frac 1q.

If is a positive rational number, , by definition.

All these definitions are required for extending the identity (x^r)^s = x^{rs} to rational exponents.

On the other hand, there are problems with the extension of these definitions to bases that are not positive real numbers. For example, a negative real number has a real th root, which is negative, if is , and no real root if is even. In the latter case, whichever complex th root one chooses for x^\frac 1n, the identity (x^a)^b=x^{ab} cannot be satisfied. For example,

\left((-1)^2\right)^\frac 12 = 1^\frac 12= 1\neq (-1)^{2\cdot\frac 12} =(-1)^1=-1.

See and for details on the way these problems may be handled.


Real exponents
For positive real numbers, exponentiation to real powers can be defined in two equivalent ways, either by extending the rational powers to reals by continuity ( , below), or in terms of the of the base and the exponential function (, below). The result is always a positive real number, and the identities and properties shown above for integer exponents remain true with these definitions for real exponents. The second definition is more commonly used, since it generalizes straightforwardly to exponents.

On the other hand, exponentiation to a real power of a negative real number is much more difficult to define consistently, as it may be non-real and have several values. One may choose one of these values, called the , but there is no choice of the principal value for which the identity

\left(b^r\right)^s = b^{r s}
is true; see . Therefore, exponentiation with a basis that is not a positive real number is generally viewed as a multivalued function.


Limits of rational exponents
Since any irrational number can be expressed as the limit of a sequence of rational numbers, exponentiation of a positive real number with an arbitrary real exponent can be defined by continuity with the rule
(2025). 9780763779474, Jones and Bartlett.
b^x = \lim_{r (\in \mathbb{Q}) \to x} b^r \quad (b \in \mathbb{R}^+,\, x \in \mathbb{R}),
where the limit is taken over rational values of only. This limit exists for every positive and every real .

For example, if , the non-terminating decimal representation and the monotonicity of the rational powers can be used to obtain intervals bounded by rational powers that are as small as desired, and must contain b^\pi:

\leftb^3,, \leftb^{3.1},, \leftb^{3.14},, \leftb^{3.141},, \leftb^{3.1415},, \leftb^{3.14159},, \ldots
So, the upper bounds and the lower bounds of the intervals form two sequences that have the same limit, denoted b^\pi.

This defines b^x for every positive and real as a continuous function of and . See also Well-defined expression.

(2025). 9789811017896


Exponential function
The exponential function may be defined as x\mapsto e^x, where e\approx 2.718 is Euler's number, but to avoid circular reasoning, this definition cannot be used here. Rather, we give an independent definition of the exponential function \exp(x), and of e=\exp(1), relying only on positive integer powers (repeated multiplication). Then we sketch the proof that this agrees with the previous definition: \exp(x)=e^x.

There are many equivalent ways to define the exponential function, one of them being

\exp(x) = \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \left(1 + \frac{x}{n}\right)^n.

One has \exp(0)=1, and the exponential identity (or multiplication rule) \exp(x)\exp(y)=\exp(x+y) holds as well, since

\exp(x)\exp(y) = \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \left(1 + \frac{x}{n}\right)^n\left(1 + \frac{y}{n}\right)^n = \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \left(1 + \frac{x+y}{n} + \frac{xy}{n^2}\right)^n,
and the second-order term \frac{xy}{n^2} does not affect the limit, yielding \exp(x)\exp(y) = \exp(x+y).

Euler's number can be defined as e=\exp(1). It follows from the preceding equations that \exp(x)=e^x when is an integer (this results from the repeated-multiplication definition of the exponentiation). If is real, \exp(x)=e^x results from the definitions given in preceding sections, by using the exponential identity if is rational, and the continuity of the exponential function otherwise.

The limit that defines the exponential function converges for every value of , and therefore it can be used to extend the definition of \exp(z), and thus e^z, from the real numbers to any complex argument . This extended exponential function still satisfies the exponential identity, and is commonly used for defining exponentiation for complex base and exponent.


Powers via logarithms
The definition of as the exponential function allows defining for every positive real numbers , in terms of exponential and function. Specifically, the fact that the natural logarithm is the of the exponential function means that one has
b = \exp(\ln b)=e^{\ln b}
for every . For preserving the identity (e^x)^y=e^{xy}, one must have
b^x=\left(e^{\ln b} \right)^x = e^{x \ln b}

So, e^{x \ln b} can be used as an alternative definition of for any positive real . This agrees with the definition given above using rational exponents and continuity, with the advantage to extend straightforwardly to any complex exponent.


Complex exponents with a positive real base
If is a positive real number, exponentiation with base and exponent is defined by means of the exponential function with complex argument (see the end of , above) as
b^z = e^{(z\ln b)},
where \ln b denotes the natural logarithm of .

This satisfies the identity

b^{z+t} = b^z b^t,
In general, \left(b^z\right)^t is not defined, since is not a real number. If a meaning is given to the exponentiation of a complex number (see , below), one has, in general,
\left(b^z\right)^t \ne b^{zt},
unless is real or is an integer.

Euler's formula,

e^{iy} = \cos y + i \sin y,
allows expressing the of b^z in terms of the real and imaginary parts of , namely
b^{x+iy}= b^x(\cos(y\ln b)+i\sin(y\ln b)),
where the of the factor is one. This results from
b^{x+iy}=b^x b^{iy}=b^x e^{iy\ln b} =b^x(\cos(y\ln b)+i\sin(y\ln b)).


Non-integer exponents with a complex base
In the preceding sections, exponentiation with non-integer exponents has been defined for positive real bases only. For other bases, difficulties appear already with the apparently simple case of th roots, that is, of exponents 1/n, where is a positive integer. Although the general theory of exponentiation with non-integer exponents applies to th roots, this case deserves to be considered first, since it does not need to use complex logarithms, and is therefore easier to understand.


th roots of a complex number
Every nonzero complex number may be written in as
z=\rho e^{i\theta}=\rho(\cos \theta +i \sin \theta),
where \rho is the of , and \theta is its argument. The argument is defined an integer multiple of ; this means that, if \theta is the argument of a complex number, then \theta +2k\pi is also an argument of the same complex number for every integer k.

The polar form of the product of two complex numbers is obtained by multiplying the absolute values and adding the arguments. It follows that the polar form of an th root of a complex number can be obtained by taking the th root of the absolute value and dividing its argument by :

\left(\rho e^{i\theta}\right)^\frac 1n=\sqrtn\rho \,e^\frac{i\theta}n.

If 2\pi is added to \theta, the complex number is not changed, but this adds 2i\pi/n to the argument of the th root, and provides a new th root. This can be done times (k=0,1,...,n-1), and provides the th roots of the complex number:

\left(\rho e^{i(\theta+2k\pi)}\right)^\frac 1n=\sqrtn\rho \,e^\frac{i(\theta+2k\pi)}n.

It is usual to choose one of the th root as the . The common choice is to choose the th root for which -\pi<\theta\le \pi, that is, the th root that has the largest real part, and, if there are two, the one with positive imaginary part. This makes the principal th root a continuous function in the whole complex plane, except for negative real values of the . This function equals the usual th root for positive real radicands. For negative real radicands, and odd exponents, the principal th root is not real, although the usual th root is real. Analytic continuation shows that the principal th root is the unique complex differentiable function that extends the usual th root to the complex plane without the nonpositive real numbers.

If the complex number is moved around zero by increasing its argument, after an increment of 2\pi, the complex number comes back to its initial position, and its th roots are permuted circularly (they are multiplied by e^{2i\pi/n}). This shows that it is not possible to define a th root function that is continuous in the whole complex plane.


Roots of unity
The th roots of unity are the complex numbers such that , where is a positive integer. They arise in various areas of mathematics, such as in discrete Fourier transform or algebraic solutions of algebraic equations (Lagrange resolvent).

The th roots of unity are the first powers of \omega =e^\frac{2\pi i}{n}, that is 1=\omega^0=\omega^n, \omega=\omega^1, \omega^2,..., \omega^{n-1}. The th roots of unity that have this generating property are called primitive th roots of unity; they have the form \omega^k=e^\frac{2k\pi i}{n}, with with . The unique primitive square root of unity is -1; the primitive fourth roots of unity are i and -i.

The th roots of unity allow expressing all th roots of a complex number as the products of a given th roots of with a th root of unity.

Geometrically, the th roots of unity lie on the of the at the vertices of a with one vertex on the real number 1.

As the number e^\frac{2k\pi i}{n} is the primitive th root of unity with the smallest positive argument, it is called the principal primitive th root of unity, sometimes shortened as principal th root of unity, although this terminology can be confused with the of 1^{1/n}, which is 1.

(2025). 9780262032933, .
Online resource .
(2025). 9780387232348, Springer.
Defined on p. 351.


Complex exponentiation
Defining exponentiation with complex bases leads to difficulties that are similar to those described in the preceding section, except that there are, in general, infinitely many possible values for z^w. So, either a is defined, which is not continuous for the values of that are real and nonpositive, or z^w is defined as a multivalued function.

In all cases, the complex logarithm is used to define complex exponentiation as

z^w=e^{w\log z},
where \log z is the variant of the complex logarithm that is used, which is a function or a multivalued function such that
e^{\log z}=z
for every in its domain of definition.


Principal value
The of the complex logarithm is the unique continuous function, commonly denoted \log, such that, for every nonzero complex number ,
e^{\log z}=z,
and the argument of satisfies
-\pi <\operatorname{Arg}z \le \pi.
The principal value of the complex logarithm is not defined for z=0, it is discontinuous at negative real values of , and it is (that is, complex differentiable) elsewhere. If is real and positive, the principal value of the complex logarithm is the natural logarithm: \log z=\ln z.

The principal value of z^w is defined as z^w=e^{w\log z}, where \log z is the principal value of the logarithm.

The function (z,w)\to z^w is holomorphic except in the neighbourhood of the points where is real and nonpositive.

If is real and positive, the principal value of z^w equals its usual value defined above. If w=1/n, where is an integer, this principal value is the same as the one defined above.


Multivalued function
In some contexts, there is a problem with the discontinuity of the principal values of \log z and z^w at the negative real values of . In this case, it is useful to consider these functions as multivalued functions.

If \log z denotes one of the values of the multivalued logarithm (typically its principal value), the other values are 2ik\pi +\log z, where is any integer. Similarly, if z^w is one value of the exponentiation, then the other values are given by

e^{w(2ik\pi +\log z)} = z^we^{2ik\pi w},
where is any integer.

Different values of give different values of z^w unless is a , that is, there is an integer such that is an integer. This results from the periodicity of the exponential function, more specifically, that e^a=e^b if and only if a-b is an integer multiple of 2\pi i.

If w=\frac mn is a rational number with and with n>0, then z^w has exactly values. In the case m=1, these values are the same as those described in § th roots of a complex number. If is an integer, there is only one value that agrees with that of .

The multivalued exponentiation is holomorphic for z\ne 0, in the sense that its graph consists of several sheets that define each a holomorphic function in the neighborhood of every point. If varies continuously along a circle around , then, after a turn, the value of z^w has changed of sheet.


Computation
The canonical form x+iy of z^w can be computed from the canonical form of and . Although this can be described by a single formula, it is clearer to split the computation in several steps.
  • of . If z=a+ib is the canonical form of ( and being real), then its polar form is z=\rho e^{i\theta}= \rho (\cos\theta + i \sin\theta), with \rho=\sqrt{a^2+b^2} and \theta=\operatorname{atan2}(b,a), where is the two-argument arctangent function.
  • Logarithm of . The of this logarithm is \log z=\ln \rho+i\theta, where \ln denotes the natural logarithm. The other values of the logarithm are obtained by adding 2ik\pi for any integer .
  • Canonical form of w\log z. If w=c+di with and real, the values of w\log z are w\log z = (c\ln \rho - d\theta-2dk\pi) +i (d\ln \rho + c\theta+2ck\pi), the principal value corresponding to k=0.
  • Final result. Using the identities e^{x+y}=e^xe^y and e^{y\ln x} = x^y, one gets z^w=\rho^c e^{-d(\theta+2k\pi)} \left(\cos (d\ln \rho + c\theta+2ck\pi) +i\sin(d\ln \rho + c\theta+2ck\pi)\right), with k=0 for the principal value.


Examples
  • i^i
    The polar form of is i=e^{i\pi/2}, and the values of \log i are thus \log i=i\left(\frac \pi 2 +2k\pi\right). It follows that i^i=e^{i\log i}=e^{-\frac \pi 2} e^{-2k\pi}.So, all values of i^i are real, the principal one being e^{-\frac \pi 2} \approx 0.2079.
  • (-2)^{3+4i}
    Similarly, the polar form of is -2 = 2e^{i \pi}. So, the above described method gives the values \begin{align}
(-2)^{3 + 4i} &= 2^3 e^{-4(\pi+2k\pi)} (\cos(4\ln 2 + 3(\pi +2k\pi)) +i\sin(4\ln 2 + 3(\pi+2k\pi)))\\ &=-2^3 e^{-4(\pi+2k\pi)}(\cos(4\ln 2) +i\sin(4\ln 2)). \end{align}In this case, all the values have the same argument 4\ln 2, and different absolute values.

In both examples, all values of z^w have the same argument. More generally, this is true if and only if the of is an integer.


Failure of power and logarithm identities
Some identities for powers and logarithms for positive real numbers will fail for complex numbers, no matter how complex powers and complex logarithms are defined as single-valued functions. For example:

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

On the other hand, when is an integer, the identities are valid for all nonzero complex numbers.

If exponentiation is considered as a multivalued function then the possible values of are . The identity holds, but saying is incorrect. | The identity holds for real numbers and , but assuming its truth for complex numbers leads to the following paradox, discovered in 1827 by Clausen:

For any integer , we have:

  1. e^{1 + 2 \pi i n} = e^1 e^{2 \pi i n} = e \cdot 1 = e
  2. \left(e^{1 + 2\pi i n}\right)^{1 + 2 \pi i n} = e\qquad (taking the (1 + 2 \pi i n)-th power of both sides)
  3. e^{1 + 4 \pi i n - 4 \pi^2 n^2} = e\qquad (using \left(e^x\right)^y = e^{xy} and expanding the exponent)
  4. e^1 e^{4 \pi i n} e^{-4 \pi^2 n^2} = e\qquad (using e^{x+y} = e^x e^y)
  5. e^{-4 \pi^2 n^2} = 1\qquad (dividing by )

but this is false when the integer is nonzero.

The error is the following: by definition, e^y is a notation for \exp(y), a true function, and x^y is a notation for \exp(y\log x), which is a multi-valued function. Thus the notation is ambiguous when . Here, before expanding the exponent, the second line should be \exp\left((1 + 2\pi i n)\log \exp(1 + 2\pi i n)\right) = \exp(1 + 2\pi i n).

Therefore, when expanding the exponent, one has implicitly supposed that \log \exp z =z for complex values of , which is wrong, as the complex logarithm is multivalued. In other words, the wrong identity must be replaced by the identity \left(e^x\right)^y = e^{y\log e^x}, which is a true identity between multivalued functions.


Irrationality and transcendence
If is a positive real , and is a rational number, then is an algebraic number. This results from the theory of algebraic extensions. This remains true if is any algebraic number, in which case, all values of (as a multivalued function) are algebraic. If is irrational (that is, not rational), and both and are algebraic, Gelfond–Schneider theorem asserts that all values of are transcendental (that is, not algebraic), except if equals or .

In other words, if is irrational and b\not\in \{0,1\}, then at least one of , and is transcendental.


Integer powers in algebra
The definition of exponentiation with positive integer exponents as repeated multiplication may apply to any associative operation denoted as a multiplication.More generally, power associativity is sufficient for the definition. The definition of requires further the existence of a multiplicative identity.

An algebraic structure consisting of a set together with an associative operation denoted multiplicatively, and a multiplicative identity denoted by is a . In such a monoid, exponentiation of an element is defined inductively by

  • x^0 = 1,
  • x^{n+1} = x x^n for every nonnegative integer .

If is a negative integer, x^n is defined only if has a multiplicative inverse.

(1979). 9780521293242, Cambridge University Press. .
In this case, the inverse of is denoted , and is defined as \left(x^{-1}\right)^{-n}.

Exponentiation with integer exponents obeys the following laws, for and in the algebraic structure, and and integers:

\begin{align}
x^0&=1\\ x^{m+n}&=x^m x^n\\ (x^m)^n&=x^{mn}\\ (xy)^n&=x^n y^n \quad \text{if } xy=yx, \text{and, in particular, if the multiplication is commutative.} \end{align}

These definitions are widely used in many areas of mathematics, notably for groups, rings, fields, (which form a ring). They apply also to functions from a set to itself, which form a monoid under function composition. This includes, as specific instances, geometric transformations, and of any mathematical structure.

When there are several operations that may be repeated, it is common to indicate the repeated operation by placing its symbol in the superscript, before the exponent. For example, if is a whose valued can be multiplied, f^n denotes the exponentiation with respect of multiplication, and f^{\circ n} may denote exponentiation with respect of function composition. That is,

(f^n)(x)=(f(x))^n=f(x) \,f(x) \cdots f(x),
and
(f^{\circ n})(x)=f(f(\cdots f(f(x))\cdots)).
Commonly, (f^n)(x) is denoted f(x)^n, while (f^{\circ n})(x) is denoted f^n(x).


In a group
A multiplicative group is a set with as associative operation denoted as multiplication, that has an , and such that every element has an inverse.

So, if is a group, x^n is defined for every x\in G and every integer .

The set of all powers of an element of a group form a . A group (or subgroup) that consists of all powers of a specific element is the generated by . If all the powers of are distinct, the group is to the \Z of the integers. Otherwise, the cyclic group is (it has a finite number of elements), and its number of elements is the order of . If the order of is , then x^n=x^0=1, and the cyclic group generated by consists of the first powers of (starting indifferently from the exponent or ).

Order of elements play a fundamental role in . For example, the order of an element in a finite group is always a divisor of the number of elements of the group (the order of the group). The possible orders of group elements are important in the study of the structure of a group (see ), and in the classification of finite simple groups.

Superscript notation is also used for ; that is, , where and are elements of a group. This notation cannot be confused with exponentiation, since the superscript is not an integer. The motivation of this notation is that conjugation obeys some of the laws of exponentiation, namely (g^h)^k=g^{hk} and (gh)^k=g^kh^k.


In a ring
In a ring, it may occur that some nonzero elements satisfy x^n=0 for some integer . Such an element is said to be . In a , the nilpotent elements form an ideal, called the nilradical of the ring.

If the nilradical is reduced to the (that is, if x\neq 0 implies x^n\neq 0 for every positive integer ), the commutative ring is said to be . Reduced rings are important in algebraic geometry, since the of an affine algebraic set is always a reduced ring.

More generally, given an ideal in a commutative ring , the set of the elements of that have a power in is an ideal, called the radical of . The nilradical is the radical of the . A is an ideal that equals its own radical. In a kx_1, over a field , an ideal is radical if and only if it is the set of all polynomials that are zero on an affine algebraic set (this is a consequence of Hilbert's Nullstellensatz).


Matrices and linear operators
If is a square matrix, then the product of with itself times is called the . Also A^0 is defined to be the identity matrix,Chapter 1, Elementary Linear Algebra, 8E, Howard Anton. and if is invertible, then A^{-n} = \left(A^{-1}\right)^n.

Matrix powers appear often in the context of discrete dynamical systems, where the matrix expresses a transition from a state vector of some system to the next state of the system. This is the standard interpretation of a , for example. Then A^2x is the state of the system after two time steps, and so forth: A^nx is the state of the system after time steps. The matrix power A^n is the transition matrix between the state now and the state at a time steps in the future. So computing matrix powers is equivalent to solving the evolution of the dynamical system. In many cases, matrix powers can be expediently computed by using eigenvalues and eigenvectors.

Apart from matrices, more general can also be exponentiated. An example is the operator of calculus, d/dx, which is a linear operator acting on functions f(x) to give a new function (d/dx)f(x) = f'(x). The th power of the differentiation operator is the th derivative:

\left(\frac{d}{dx}\right)^nf(x) = \frac{d^n}{dx^n}f(x) = f^{(n)}(x).

These examples are for discrete exponents of linear operators, but in many circumstances it is also desirable to define powers of such operators with continuous exponents. This is the starting point of the mathematical theory of semigroups.E. Hille, R. S. Phillips: Functional Analysis and Semi-Groups. American Mathematical Society, 1975. Just as computing matrix powers with discrete exponents solves discrete dynamical systems, so does computing matrix powers with continuous exponents solve systems with continuous dynamics. Examples include approaches to solving the , Schrödinger equation, , and other partial differential equations including a time evolution. The special case of exponentiating the derivative operator to a non-integer power is called the fractional derivative which, together with the fractional integral, is one of the basic operations of the fractional calculus.


Finite fields
A field is an algebraic structure in which multiplication, addition, subtraction, and division are defined and satisfy the properties that multiplication is and every nonzero element has a multiplicative inverse. This implies that exponentiation with integer exponents is well-defined, except for nonpositive powers of . Common examples are the field of , the and the , considered earlier in this article, which are all .

A finite field is a field with a of elements. This number of elements is either a or a ; that is, it has the form q=p^k, where is a prime number, and is a positive integer. For every such , there are fields with elements. The fields with elements are all , which allows, in general, working as if there were only one field with elements, denoted \mathbb F_q.

One has

x^q=x
for every x\in \mathbb F_q.

A primitive element in \mathbb F_q is an element such that the set of the first powers of (that is, \{g^1=g, g^2, \ldots, g^{p-1}=g^0=1\}) equals the set of the nonzero elements of \mathbb F_q. There are \varphi (p-1) primitive elements in \mathbb F_q, where \varphi is Euler's totient function.

In \mathbb F_q, the freshman's dream identity

(x+y)^p = x^p+y^p
is true for the exponent . As x^p=x in \mathbb F_q, It follows that the map
\begin{align}
F\colon{} & \mathbb F_q \to \mathbb F_q\\ & x\mapsto x^p \end{align} is over \mathbb F_q, and is a field automorphism, called the Frobenius automorphism. If q=p^k, the field \mathbb F_q has automorphisms, which are the first powers (under composition) of . In other words, the of \mathbb F_q is of order , generated by the Frobenius automorphism.

The Diffie–Hellman key exchange is an application of exponentiation in finite fields that is widely used for secure communications. It uses the fact that exponentiation is computationally inexpensive, whereas the inverse operation, the discrete logarithm, is computationally expensive. More precisely, if is a primitive element in \mathbb F_q, then g^e can be efficiently computed with exponentiation by squaring for any , even if is large, while there is no known computationally practical algorithm that allows retrieving from g^e if is sufficiently large.


Powers of sets
The Cartesian product of two sets and is the set of the (x,y) such that x\in S and y\in T. This operation is not properly nor , but has these properties , that allow identifying, for example, (x,(y,z)), ((x,y),z), and (x,y,z).

This allows defining the th power S^n of a set as the set of all - (x_1, \ldots, x_n) of elements of .

When is endowed with some structure, it is frequent that S^n is naturally endowed with a similar structure. In this case, the term "" is generally used instead of "Cartesian product", and exponentiation denotes product structure. For example \R^n (where \R denotes the real numbers) denotes the Cartesian product of copies of \R, as well as their direct product as , topological spaces, rings, etc.


Sets as exponents
A -tuple (x_1, \ldots, x_n) of elements of can be considered as a function from \{1,\ldots, n\}. This generalizes to the following notation.

Given two sets and , the set of all functions from to is denoted S^T. This exponential notation is justified by the following canonical isomorphisms (for the first one, see ):

(S^T)^U\cong S^{T\times U},
S^{T\sqcup U}\cong S^T\times S^U,
where \times denotes the Cartesian product, and \sqcup the .

One can use sets as exponents for other operations on sets, typically for of , , or modules. For distinguishing direct sums from direct products, the exponent of a direct sum is placed between parentheses. For example, \R^\N denotes the vector space of the infinite sequences of real numbers, and \R^{(\N)} the vector space of those sequences that have a finite number of nonzero elements. The latter has a basis consisting of the sequences with exactly one nonzero element that equals , while the of the former cannot be explicitly described (because their existence involves Zorn's lemma).

In this context, can represents the set \{0,1\}. So, 2^S denotes the of , that is the set of the functions from to \{0,1\}, which can be identified with the set of the of , by mapping each function to the of .

This fits in with the exponentiation of cardinal numbers, in the sense that , where is the cardinality of .


In category theory
In the category of sets, the between sets and are the functions from to . It results that the set of the functions from to that is denoted Y^X in the preceding section can also be denoted \hom(X,Y). The isomorphism (S^T)^U\cong S^{T\times U} can be rewritten
\hom(U,S^T)\cong \hom(T\times U,S).
This means the functor "exponentiation to the power " is a to the functor "direct product with ".

This generalizes to the definition of exponentiation in a category in which finite exist: in such a category, the functor X\to X^T is, if it exists, a right adjoint to the functor Y\to T\times Y. A category is called a Cartesian closed category, if direct products exist, and the functor Y\to X\times Y has a right adjoint for every .


Repeated exponentiation
Just as exponentiation of natural numbers is motivated by repeated multiplication, it is possible to define an operation based on repeated exponentiation; this operation is sometimes called hyper-4 or tetration. Iterating tetration leads to another operation, and so on, a concept named . This sequence of operations is expressed by the Ackermann function and Knuth's up-arrow notation. Just as exponentiation grows faster than multiplication, which is faster-growing than addition, tetration is faster-growing than exponentiation. Evaluated at , the functions addition, multiplication, exponentiation, and tetration yield 6, 9, 27, and () respectively.


Limits of powers
Zero to the power of zero gives a number of examples of limits that are of the indeterminate form 00. The limits in these examples exist, but have different values, showing that the two-variable function has no limit at the point . One may consider at what points this function does have a limit.

More precisely, consider the function f(x,y) = x^y defined on D = \{(x, y) \in \mathbf{R}^2 : x > 0 \}. Then can be viewed as a subset of (that is, the set of all pairs with , belonging to the extended real number line , endowed with the ), which will contain the points at which the function has a limit.

In fact, has a limit at all accumulation points of , except for , , and .Nicolas Bourbaki, Topologie générale, V.4.2. Accordingly, this allows one to define the powers by continuity whenever , , except for , , and , which remain indeterminate forms.

Under this definition by continuity, we obtain:

  • and , when .
  • and , when .
  • and , when .
  • and , when .

These powers are obtained by taking limits of for positive values of . This method does not permit a definition of when , since pairs with are not accumulation points of .

On the other hand, when is an integer, the power is already meaningful for all values of , including negative ones. This may make the definition obtained above for negative problematic when is odd, since in this case as tends to through positive values, but not negative ones.


Efficient computation with integer exponents
Computing using iterated multiplication requires multiplication operations, but it can be computed more efficiently than that, as illustrated by the following example. To compute , apply Horner's rule to the exponent 100 written in binary:
100 = 2^2 +2^5 + 2^6 = 2^2(1+2^3(1+2)).
Then compute the following terms in order, reading Horner's rule from right to left.

22 = 4
2 (22) = 23 = 8
(23)2 = 26 = 64
(26)2 = 212 =
(212)2 = 224 =
2 (224) = 225 =
(225)2 = 250 =
(250)2 = 2100 =
This series of steps only requires 8 multiplications instead of 99.

In general, the number of multiplication operations required to compute can be reduced to \sharp n +\lfloor \log_{2} n\rfloor -1, by using exponentiation by squaring, where \sharp n denotes the number of s in the binary representation of . For some exponents (100 is not among them), the number of multiplications can be further reduced by computing and using the minimal addition-chain exponentiation. Finding the minimal sequence of multiplications (the minimal-length addition chain for the exponent) for is a difficult problem, for which no efficient algorithms are currently known (see Subset sum problem), but many reasonably efficient heuristic algorithms are available. However, in practical computations, exponentiation by squaring is efficient enough, and much more easy to implement.


Iterated functions
Function composition is a that is defined on functions such that the of the function written on the right is included in the domain of the function written on the left. It is denoted g\circ f, and defined as
(g\circ f)(x)=g(f(x))
for every in the domain of .

If the domain of a function equals its codomain, one may compose the function with itself an arbitrary number of time, and this defines the th power of the function under composition, commonly called the th iterate of the function. Thus f^n denotes generally the th iterate of ; for example, f^3(x) means f(f(f(x))).

When a multiplication is defined on the codomain of the function, this defines a multiplication on functions, the pointwise multiplication, which induces another exponentiation. When using functional notation, the two kinds of exponentiation are generally distinguished by placing the exponent of the functional iteration before the parentheses enclosing the arguments of the function, and placing the exponent of pointwise multiplication after the parentheses. Thus f^2(x)= f(f(x)), and f(x)^2= f(x)\cdot f(x). When functional notation is not used, disambiguation is often done by placing the composition symbol before the exponent; for example f^{\circ 3}=f\circ f \circ f, and f^3=f\cdot f\cdot f. For historical reasons, the exponent of a repeated multiplication is placed before the argument for some specific functions, typically the trigonometric functions. So, \sin^2 x and \sin^2(x) both mean \sin(x)\cdot\sin(x) and not \sin(\sin(x)), which, in any case, is rarely considered. Historically, several variants of these notations were used by different authors.

In this context, the exponent -1 denotes always the , if it exists. So \sin^{-1}x=\sin^{-1}(x) = \arcsin x. For the multiplicative inverse fractions are generally used as in 1/\sin(x)=\frac 1{\sin x}.


In programming languages
Programming languages generally express exponentiation either as an infix operator or as a function application, as they do not support superscripts. The most common operator symbol for exponentiation is the (^). The original version of ASCII included an uparrow symbol (↑), intended for exponentiation, but this was replaced by the caret in 1967, so the caret became usual in programming languages.
(2025). 9780201700527, Addison-Wesley Professional.
The notations include:

In most programming languages with an infix exponentiation operator, it is right-associative, that is, a^b^c is interpreted as a^(b^c).

(2025). 9780136073475, Addison-Wesley.
This is because (a^b)^c is equal to a^(b*c) and thus not as useful. In some languages, it is left-associative, notably in , , and the Microsoft Excel formula language.

Other programming languages use functional notation:

  • (expt x y): .
  • pown x y: F# (for integer base, integer exponent).

Still others only provide exponentiation as part of standard libraries:

  • pow(x, y): C, C++ (in math library).
  • Math.Pow(x, y): C#.
  • math:pow(X, Y): Erlang.
  • Math.pow(x, y): Java.
  • [Math]::Pow(x, y): .
In some languages that prioritize such as Rust, exponentiation is performed via a multitude of methods:

  • x.pow(y) for x and y as integers
  • x.powf(y) for x and y as floating-point numbers
  • x.powi(y) for x as a float and y as an integer


See also

Notes
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