Is radical a type of exponent? What do we call the power when it is a complex number?
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A radical $x^\frac{1}{n}$ (the $n$th root of $x$) is a subset of exponents $x^y$ where $n\in\mathbb{Z}$ and $y\in\mathbb{R}$.
You can still use the terms "exponent" and "power" when $x\in\mathbb{C}$, but radicals are more ill-defined.

Bobson Dugnutt
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@ankit Did this answer your question? – Bobson Dugnutt Sep 04 '16 at 19:14
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yes @Lovsovs, it does answer. – ankit Sep 06 '16 at 04:39
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They are different things even if related. The sign in front of the radical symbol of power or exponent can be either positive or negative in example given:
$$ e ^ {\pm \sqrt{ x^2- a x + b \sin \omega t} } $$
The radical is a special symbol expressing exponents with different symbolization used for powers and roots only.

Narasimham
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