That is basically a cubed root. If you know the cubes (1, 8, 27, 64, 125, ...) then you can estimate the value of n(1/3) where n = any number.
'''(one third) to the power (negative one) = three'''
Divide by 3
The easiest way to do this is with a calculator. Anyway, the definitions are as follows. x to the power 1/2 is the square root of x, x to the power 1/3 is the cubic root of x, and in general, x to the power 1/n is the nth. root of x. If you also have a number other than one in the numerator: For example, to calculate x to the power 3/5 you first raise x to the power 3, then take the fifth root of the result. You can also do it the other way: first calculate the fifth root, then raise to the third power. In general, to calculate x to the power m/n, you take the nth root, then raise the result to the power m.
It is: 1,000,000 = one million
One third times nine to the eighth power equals 14,348,907
1 divided by 3.2/63/9.33 Repeating.You can also multiply any number by 0.3 or 1/3 to find one third of that number.
'''(one third) to the power (negative one) = three'''
Let the number be n.Then (n3)3 = n3 x 3 = n9.........or n to the power nine.However, if the question is what the the one-third power of a number cubed, then:(n3)1/3 = n3 x 1/3 = n1 = n
83
racist
Do the number ^ (1/3). The number to the one-third power. It's the same as the cube root of the number.
8 to the power of one-third is 2.
one third
Divide by 3
10,077,692.
The easiest way to do this is with a calculator. Anyway, the definitions are as follows. x to the power 1/2 is the square root of x, x to the power 1/3 is the cubic root of x, and in general, x to the power 1/n is the nth. root of x. If you also have a number other than one in the numerator: For example, to calculate x to the power 3/5 you first raise x to the power 3, then take the fifth root of the result. You can also do it the other way: first calculate the fifth root, then raise to the third power. In general, to calculate x to the power m/n, you take the nth root, then raise the result to the power m.
A very large number. One and one half times ten to the twenty third power is the current estimate of the number of stars in the universe! There are 500 billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy and there are 300 billion galaxies in the universe by the current estimate. If all of the other galaxies are the size of the Milky Way galaxy then the total number of stars is 1.5 times ten to the twenty third power!