This is related to a question on Math Stack Exchange.
Given a rational number $a>0$ and an $n\in\mathbb{N}$ such that $x^n - a$ is irreducible over $\mathbb{Q}$, it is known that every subfield of $\mathbb{Q}\bigl(\sqrt[n]{a}\bigr)$ has the form $\mathbb{Q}\bigl(\sqrt[d]{a}\bigr)$ for some $d\mid n$.
Is there an elementary proof of this result? All of the references I could find use cogalois theory. (See this paper, for example, immediately after the proof of Theorem 1.6.)