What is the Quotient Rule of Integer Exponents?(1 point)

Responses

xaxb=xb−a

the fraction with numerator x to the A th power and denominator x to the b th power is equal to x raised to the b minus A power
xaxb=xab
the fraction with numerator x to the A th power and denominator x to the b th power is equal to x raised to the A b power
xaxb=xa−b
the fraction with numerator x to the A th power and denominator x to the b th power is equal to x raised to the A minus b power
xaxb=xa+b

xaxb = xa+b

The quotient rule of integer exponents states that when dividing two expressions with the same base, you subtract the exponents. In this case, x is the base and a and b are the exponents. So when dividing x to the power of a by x to the power of b, the quotient is x to the power of a minus b.

The Quotient Rule of Integer Exponents is: x^a / x^b = x^(a - b). This means that when you have a fraction with numerator x raised to the power of a and denominator x raised to the power of b, it is equal to x raised to the power of a minus b.