No, what I am saying is that 4=4 only if the second 4 is raised to the 1st power like this: 4=4^1. If we had a different problem where 16=4^m, m could only be 2 as 4 squared =16.
Hello Mr. Camp, This is Jackie a former student from your AP chemistry class. :) I hope you're doing well. I came across your videos as a refresher for my analytical chemistry course I'm taking right now. Thank you for always making the explanations so clear. Not only was your class always interesting but you made me realize how much I like chemistry. Now, I'm about to graduate and looking forward to grad school next year in organic chemistry!! Thanks Mr. Camp
Hey Jackie! Great to hear from you and thanks for the kind words. So glad to hear you are continuing on with Chem! Best of luck next year in grad school. -Camp
On my TI-30x II S, I use the x to the square root button where x = whatever root you are solving for. For TI 83 or 84, watch this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-9P12l2w2SFk.html