Lesson 22: Laws of Exponents I: The Product Rule

Repeating Multiplication

An exponent tells you how many times to multiply a base by itself. The Product Rule explains what happens when you multiply two powers with the same base.

\[x^a \cdot x^b = x^{a+b}\]

Worked Examples

Example 1: Basic Variables

Simplify: \(x^3 \cdot x^4\)

Example 2: Multiple Bases

Simplify: \((2x^2y)(5x^3y^4)\)

Example 3: Negative Exponents

Simplify: \(x^5 \cdot x^{-2}\)

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In the "Many-Body Problem," where we have multiple electrons, the total wavefunction is often a product of individual wavefunctions: \(\Psi = \psi_1 \psi_2 \dots\). If these wavefunctions involve exponential factors (which they almost always do, like \(e^{ikx}\)), the Product Rule allows us to combine them into a single exponential. This is the only way physicists can handle the math of complex atoms with many electrons.