Chapter 2. Introduction to Algebra

OBJECTIVES

When you have completed this chapter, you should be able to

  • Define common algebraic terms: variable, expression, term, polynomial, and so forth.

  • Identify and define an equation.

  • Separate a term into variables and constants.

  • Simplify an expression by removing symbols of grouping.

  • Add and subtract polynomials.

  • Use the laws of exponents for multiplication, division, and raising to apower.

  • Multiply monomials, binomials, and multinomials.

  • Raise a multinomial to a power.

  • Divide a polynomial by a monomial or by a polynomial.

In Chapter 1 we showed how to raise a number to a power. For example, 32 or 3 raised to the power 2, means

32 = (3)(3)

In a similar way, x2, or x raised to the power 2, means

x2 = (x)(x)

where x can stand for any number, not just 3. Going further, we can represent the exponent by a symbol, say n. Thus

While 32 was an arithmetic expression, xn is an algebraic expression. We can think of algebra as a generalization of arithmetic. Some knowledge of algebra is essential in technical work. Suppose, for example, you see in a handbook that the power P delivered to a resistor, Fig. 2-1, is equal to VI, the voltage times the current. Then in another place you find that P is equal to V2/R, the square of the voltage divided by the resistance. In a third book you see that the power is equal to I2R, the square of the current times the resistance! ...

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