Hi I need help with this exponent problem.

(x^-1 + y^-1)^-2

thank you

I assume it is to simplify.

1/(1/x + 1/y)2

(xy)2/(y+x)2

remember this: (a+b)^2=(a+b)(a+b) so in
the denominator this happened

(xy)(1/x+1/y)(xy)(1/x+1/y)
(y+x)^2

thank you very much

_____1_______

(1/x + 1/y)^2

_________1_________
(1/x^2 + 2/xy + 1/y^2)

______x^2_y^2______
(y^2 + 2xy +x^2)

or
_x^2_y^2_
(x+y)^2

Of course! To solve the exponent problem (x^-1 + y^-1)^-2, let's break it down step by step.

Step 1: Simplify the expression inside the parentheses.
The expression inside the parentheses consists of two terms, both with negative exponents:

(x^-1 + y^-1)

To simplify this, we can rewrite it as a single fraction:

(x^-1 + y^-1) = 1/x + 1/y

Step 2: Square the expression inside the parentheses.
To square the expression 1/x + 1/y, we simply multiply it by itself:

(1/x + 1/y)^2 = (1/x + 1/y) * (1/x + 1/y)

Step 3: Expand and simplify.
To expand the squared expression, we use the distributive property:

(1/x + 1/y) * (1/x + 1/y) = (1/x)*(1/x) + (1/x)*(1/y) + (1/y)*(1/x) + (1/y)*(1/y)

Multiplying the numerators and denominators gives:

= 1/(x^2) + 1/(xy) + 1/(yx) + 1/(y^2)

Since (xy) is the same as (yx), we can simplify this to:

= 1/(x^2) + 2/(xy) + 1/(y^2)

So, the simplified expression of (x^-1 + y^-1)^-2 is:

1/(x^2) + 2/(xy) + 1/(y^2)

I hope this helps! Let me know if you have any further questions.