All even powers.
No. A polynomial has positive powers of the variable.
You first define negative powers as the reciprocals of the positive powers ie x-a = 1/xa. You have the folowing property for positive powers: xa * xb = xa+b You extend the following property to negative powers: So xa * x-a = x0. But by definition, xa * x-a = xa * 1/xa = 1 So x0 = 1
You evaluate the powers of 10 and a exponent of positive 4.
All the powers and exponents of 1 are 1.The powers and exponents of any of the other numbers up to 10 are equivalent to the all the positive numbers - rational and irrational.
A negative powers is defined as the reciprocal of the corresponding positive power. For example, 10-3 is the same a 1 / 103.
by doing reciprocal
10, 100, 1000, 10000, ... are the positive powers. 0.1, 0.01, 0.001, ... are negative powers.
You take away the negative sign and put 1 over the base with the (now positive) exponent. Example: x to the negative 2 becomes 1 over x to the 2nd.
positive powers of ten are standard form, this is when large numbers are simplified to make math easier e.g 100000000 is 1x10^9
put the number under one and make the power positive... like this 3-3 = 1/33 x-2 = 1/x2
(-2)^3 = (2*-1)^3 = (2^3)*(-1)^3 = 8*-1 = -8 General behavior: Negative numbers raised to even powers are positive, raised to odd powers are negative.
powers of 10 just move the decimal point over. positive powers move it to the right & negatives move it to the left so 1.00^2= 100 01.^-2= .01 anything less than 1 can be put into a fraction