4 (from "the 4th power")
4/3
No, an exponent is not called a base number. the base is the number before the exponent: 34. 3 is the base, 4 is the exponent the expont could also be refered to as three to the fourth power
A monomial in one variable of degree 4 is an expression that consists of a single term with a variable raised to the fourth power. An example of such a monomial is (5x^4), where 5 is the coefficient and (x) is the variable. The degree of the monomial is determined by the exponent of the variable, which in this case is 4.
6
3^16 / 3^4 = 3^(16-4) = 3^12.
In the expression 45 the 4 is the base and the 5 is the exponent.
4^5 5 is the exponent.
4/3
45 - The number at the bottom (4) is the base; the small number at the top (5) is the exponent.
No, an exponent is not called a base number. the base is the number before the exponent: 34. 3 is the base, 4 is the exponent the expont could also be refered to as three to the fourth power
In the expression 18 to the 4th power, the exponent is 4. An exponent indicates the number of times the base number (in this case, 18) is multiplied by itself. So, 18 to the 4th power means 18 multiplied by itself 4 times, which is equal to 104,976.
The power could then be called an exponent. The number that is being raised to a power is called the base. In the case of 42, the exponent is 2 and the base is 4.
81 = 3^4 (or 3 to the fourth power)
A monomial in one variable of degree 4 is an expression that consists of a single term with a variable raised to the fourth power. An example of such a monomial is (5x^4), where 5 is the coefficient and (x) is the variable. The degree of the monomial is determined by the exponent of the variable, which in this case is 4.
6
11(base number) was multiplied by it's own number five times, in exponent form that would be eleven to the power of 5 ex: 11x11x11x11x11=11to the power of 5
3^16 / 3^4 = 3^(16-4) = 3^12.