[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[xmca] Why Does N to the Power of Zero = 1?



I've been working on math games to play in the back seat of a car while stuck in a Korean traffic jam (during the various lunar holidays when everybody visits the ancestral graves).
 
So I've got a version of "Twenty Four" with cell phone numbers called "Cell Phone Golf". In Korea, cell phone numbers usually have eight digits once you remove the company code. Mine, for example is 3475 2505.
 
For the first hole of cell phone golf we split my number in two. My young opponent takes 3475 and I take 2505. We both work to hit the number ONE using the four arithmetic operations (and then two, and so on all the way up to eighteen, or until the traffic clears up). My opponent tees off first, 
 
(3-4) + (7-5) = 1
 
Man, she's got a mean drive. Just look at those negative numbers. A hole in one! 
 
Now it's my turn. This is going to be hard to beat.
 
(2-5) + (0+5). Nah. that doesn't work....
 
I've got it! 
 
(2 + 5 + 5) RAISED to the POWER of ZERO!
 
A hole in one! Ha! I explain to my young opponent that any number raised to the power of zero is 1.
 
But she gives me a skeptical sidelong glance: I am suspected of cheating. She demands to know WHY any number raised to the power of zero is equal to one. 
 
Can anyone help me out before the traffic improves?
 
David Kellogg
Seoul National University of Education
 
 



__________________________________________
_____
xmca mailing list
xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca