The law of powers requires that xn divided by xm = x(n - m).
Consider this when n = m: xn divided by xn = x(n - n), ie 1 = x0.
x2 = x times x
x1 = x times x divided by x ie x
x0 = x divided by x = 1
x-1 = 1 divided by x = 1/x
x-2 = 1/x divided by x ie 1/x2
etc
One. Any number to the zero power is one.
Any number to the power of zero equals one.
Zero to any power is zero; any non-zero number to the power zero is one. Thus, zero to the power zero is sort of contradictory.
Any number (except zero) raised to the power of zero, is one.
yes, any number to the power of zero is one
Any nonzero number raised to the power of zero is equal to one (1).By definition.
Any number to the first power equals that number, and any number to the zero power equals one.
By definition, any number raised to the zero power is "one".
Any Non-zero number, raised to the zero-power is equal to one (1). Zero raised to the zero power is not defined, but can converge towards a limit, for certain functions.
Any number to the zero power equals one.
When we raise a number to the zeroth power, that means we multiply the number by itself zero times. So, the reason that any number to the zero power is one is because any number to the zero power is just the product of no numbers at all, which is the multiplicative identity, 1.
1. Any number to the power of zero is equal to one.