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
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.
You evaluate the powers of 10 and a exponent of positive 4.
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
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.
10, 100, 1000, 10000, ... are the positive powers. 0.1, 0.01, 0.001, ... are negative powers.
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