You need to put all the variables on one side. Do this by adding or subtracting them.
Yes.
Not necessarily. Every exponent in the exponent must be a non-negative integer. This is not what you have specified. For example, if n = 3.5, it is not a term in a polynomial expression.
Let's use N to represent any number.N x N = NN x -N = -N-N x -N = NSo the rules are:A positive integer times a positive integer will be a positive integerA positive integer times a negative integer will be a negative integerA negative integer times a negative integer will be a positive integer.
The exponential expression a^n is read a to the nth power. In this expression, a is the base and n is the exponent. The number represented by a^n is called the nth power of a.When n is a positive integer, you can interpret a^n as a^n = a x a x ... x a (n factors).
No, there is not. Given any positive integer n, n+1 is also a positive integer and it is larger.
Choose a nonzero integer for n to show -n can be evaluated as a positive number?
a positive integer A that, if increased or decreased by the same positive integer B, yields 2 positive integers, A+B and A-B, that are both perfect squares" OK... i figured out kinda what it meant... i think the integer B is equal to A-1, like the rectangular number definition: n(n-1)
1,560 is.
n x 10k ; n is the coefficient, 10 is the base, k is the integer exponent.
Exponentiation ( power ) is a mathmatical operation, written as bn, involving two numbers, the base b and the exponent (or index or power) n. When n is a positive integer, exponentiation corresponds to repeated multiplacation; in other words, a product of n factors, each of which is equal to b (the product itself can also be called power):
Since n is positive, |n| = n, so you have 2n - n = n. The difference is n.
The exponential expression a^n is read a to the nth power. In this expression, a is the base and n is the exponent. The number represented by a^n is called the nth power of a.When n is a positive integer, you can interpret a^n as a^n = a x a x ... x a (n factors).