This week in math we learned about negative exponents and fraction exponents.
A negative exponent such as is equal to which is equal to , it is normally very hard to evaluate a negative exponent but it is made feasibly doable by converting the negative into a positive, however this would change the entire output of the equation so we also have to switch the denominator and the numerator, because every whole number has a denominator of at least 1: 5 becomes , and because the exponent only applies to the 5 the equation is now , is equal to 25 so the final answer is .
Exponents that are fractions can be simpler, for example, this is equivalent to which is equal to 2. Equations that use fractions with numerators more than 1 are a bit different, with in radical form it would be interpreted as , the numerator turns into the exponent for the radical, since we know that the cube root of 8 is 2 so we know that = 4 because is equal to 4, you always root with the denominator and use the numerator as the exponent.