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| Question 266289:  Good morning guys
 This is my equation (under the rational expression section in my textbook)
 Simplify (2x^3-2x^2-12x)(x^4-2x^3-8x^2)^-1 (That is a negative one)
 What I've done so far
 Factored both polynomials
 (2x^2-2x)(x+6)
 _____________
 (x^2+2x)(x^2+4x^2)
 Since it is a -1 I followed the text book instructions and put
 (2x^2-2x)(-1)(6+x)
 _______________
 (x^2+2x)(x^2+4x^2)
 That's where I lose track.
 Any help is welcome. Thank you very much!
 Answer by nerdybill(7384)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! When you have something like:
 a^(-2)
 To make it a positive exponent you can move it to the denominator:
 1/a^2
 .
 Similarly:
 1/a^(-2)
 To make it a positive exponent, move it the numerator:
 a^2
 .
 Your problem then:
 (2x^3-2x^2-12x)(x^4-2x^3-8x^2)^-1
 can be written as a fraction:
 (2x^3-2x^2-12x)
 -----------------
 (x^4-2x^3-8x^2)
 .
 Now, factoring out what's common:
 2x(x^2-x-6)
 -----------------
 x^2(x^2-2x-8)
 .
 2x(x-3)(x+2)
 -----------------
 x^2(x-4)(x+2)
 .
 Canceling like-terms, we get:
 2(x-3)
 --------
 x(x-4)
 
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