yes, for example x2/f56.75 =5.34534
Not always, no.
We're going to need a number.
The way you add a negative number to a positive number is very simple to learn. First you need to check which number is bigger, the negative or the positive. Then you subtract the smaller number from the bigger number. Whichever number is bigger is the sign you keep. If the bigger number was positive your going to put a + in front of the answer. If its negative your going to put a minus sign in front .Here's an example: -5 + +9 = +4
500 can be cubed and, sure as anything, is going to be bigger than 400.
Depends on what you mean. On derailer gear bikes going from a smaller to a bigger sprocket at the rear will make pedaling easier. Going from a smaller to a bigger chainring up front will make pedaling harder. On an internal gear bike, you don't have that visible clue. But there's usually an indicator on the shifter. And going to a higher number will make pedalling harder.
Numbers have no end. There is an infinite number of numbers. They never stop going higher and higher.
The force that folded the Earth's crust to create the Himalayas up is still going on, so if you mean "bigger" in the sense of "higher", yes... but very, very slowly.
-8
If you want to subtract a smaller number from a bigger number then just subtract. For example: 14 - 12 = 2 and etc. (more but it is going to be too long) 15 - 13 = 2 16 - 14 = 2
406=2x203203=7x29PF=2x7x29The PF (Prime Factorization) of 406 is 2x7x29.*NOTE: When solving prime factorization, please use a factor tree. They're useful because when you start with a number, you find two factors that together multiplied equal the top number. If one of those factors are composite, find two factors for that number, and keep going until you come to a conclusion where the last number is prime. Therefore, the first factor for each composite factor of the top number, multiplied together, equal the number you started with.
No there isn't Infinity is an unending thing, never ends, keeps going and goin!
The process is roughly the same; you're going to break a number down into component parts, but the end results are different. The factors of 36 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36 The prime factorization of 36 is 2 x 2 x 3 x 3