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Why something with negative exponent or a variable at denominator is not allowed to be called polynomial?(I know the rules of polynomial but I don't know why )
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Morally, letting negative powers be included in the definition of a polynomial introduces the notion of poles: we like polynomials because they are some of the simplest, most well-behaved objects to study which are differentiable everywhere. Not the case with negative exponents!
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So ,,, we don't include negative exponents or a variable in denominator a part of polynomial just because we do not want to make polynomials hard to understand or a difficult thing . Is it just right for square root of a variable?
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It's not necessarily a case of not wanting them to be hard to understand -- as I pointed out, the moment you want to include negative exponents, you lose the nice properties that polynomials with non-negative powers have.
Is it just right for square root of a variable?
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Thanks a lot !!:-)
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Hi Abbas0000,
A polynomial is an algaebric expression in the form of
which satisfies 2 conditions-
•The powers of the variables are whole nos. (In this case
);andSo any expression of the type satisfying the 2 conditions are classified as a polynomial.
If the variables are non-whole nos. and the coefficients are non-real nos. then the expression becomes too complex to be classified as a polynomial.
Last edited by iamaditya (2017-08-05 18:22:41)
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