Math, asked by yadavvirendra01234, 1 month ago

Show that:(a^m/a-^n) ^m-n × (a^n/a^-l) ^n-l × (a^l/a-m) ^l-m =1​

Answers

Answered by sgsarmaan13dec7
0

Answer:

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

Step-by-step explanation:

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

53 + 47 = 100 : simples?

But those itching for their Good Will Hunting moment, the Guinness Book of Records puts Goldbach’s Conjecture as the current longest-standing maths problem, which has been around for 257 years.

It states that every even number is the sum of two prime numbers: for example, 53 + 47 = 100. 

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