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spatula232

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Was doing a past paper and had the Q: ln(e(x+y))2 -- They had the answer 2(x+y); but I thought you could only bring the power down if it was within the bracket. Wouldn't it just be (x+y).ln(e)^2 = x+y???

An explanation would be great
 
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VBN2470

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Answer should be , but if the 2 was inside the bracket as such then the answer would be
 

spatula232

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So then why can you pull the whole (x+y)^2 down? This is the part that's confusing me because I thought you could only do that if it was in the bracket - and then that would be the case for what you said for the second time

What I'm asking in essence is when does the power log rule apply? Because I thought it was only for when the power was within the bracket, like ln(e^2(x+y))
 

VBN2470

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I'm assuming the notation is as such:
 
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VBN2470

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The power log rule applies. I am not actually pulling down, I am pulling down and squaring it.
 

rand_althor

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What I'm asking in essence is when does the power log rule apply? Because I thought it was only for when the power was within the bracket, like ln(e^2(x+y))
The rule is

You are right - it is only when the power is in the bracket, i.e.
 

VBN2470

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E.g. If we want to simplify , this actually means that we want to find
 

InteGrand

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Was doing a past paper and had the Q: ln(e(x+y))2 -- They had the answer 2(x+y); but I thought you could only bring the power down if it was within the bracket. Wouldn't it just be (x+y).ln(e)^2 = x+y???

An explanation would be great
 

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