My level of perspective: I've been teaching myself mathematics mostly using Art of Problem Solving books, and various online resources. Have basically wrapped up the AoPS Prealgebra. Previously have worked through somewhat random concepts/techniques at varying levels/in varying branches of maths.
I was looking online for problems online and came across a problem that has an aspect that has been stumping me, a full explanation to follow.
$\frac{1}{(x^3+cx^{-3})^\frac{1}{3}}$, factoring $(x^{-3})^\frac{1}{3}$ = $\frac{x}{(x^6+c)^\frac{1}{3}}$
How that factoring results in the second expression with x in the numerator is thankfully clear to me.
My problem is this: The factoring would not be so unusual to me, if it weren't for the preservation of the rational exponent of the factor. What I am inclined to think is that the rule being applied is the power of a product rule. Then it makes sense, that by having the same rational exponent on the factored term as on its 'parent', I can apply the power of a product rule and multiplication of the factor by the terms from which it was initially factored can proceed as normal.
However, on a conceptual level, I'm having a real headache. My brain keeps trying to tell me that what 'should' happen is that the term that I factor out doesn't need that exponent, that is, I would just be factoring out $(x^{-3})$, instead of $(x^{-3})^\frac{1}{3}$. It seems strange to me that any terms 'inside' $(x^3+cx^{-3})^\frac{1}{3}$ , all carry a rational exponent property, so that when they are factored out, they carry that property with them. I can come up with all kinds of explanations for myself supporting that this is just an example of the product of powers rule, but I can't wrap my head around why any term that I should factor out of that sum would also have that rational exponent. I know this isn't a very clear problem, but perhaps someone sees/understands this agonizing caused by my intuition clashing with what (I think) I know.
Edit: I've been thinking that it makes sense that the factors be scaled by the exponent of the expression from which they are initially factored. In a manner of speaking, if one factored a term (here, reciprocal of x-cubed) and chose not to include the exponent as well (taking the cube-root of the factor), then the term would not be 'compressed' in the way that its parent was, and so it both could not have 'come from' that original parent (couldn't have been factored from), and, could not be multiplied by those terms directly, only after the terms had already had their cube-root taken.
I know someone is going to have to fix my Latex, I've never used it before.
Sincere thanks in advance for any advice.
Step by step:
$$\frac{1}{(x^3+cx^{-3})^{1/3}}=\frac{1}{((x^{-3})(x^6+c))^{1/3}}=\frac{1}{(x^{-3})^{1/3}(x^6+c)^{1/3}}=\frac{1}{x^{-1}(x^6+c)^{1/3}} =\frac{x}{(x^6+c)^{1/3}}.$$