The same way as you find the square root with an even-numbered exponent. For example, the square root of x10 is x5. That is, divide the exponent by 2. Similarly, the square root of x7 is x3.5. Once again, you simply calculate one-half of the exponent. If you prefer to express this with integer exponents and square roots, in this example you can write x3.5 as x3x0.5. The second part, x0.5, is equivalent to the square root of "x".
The two are related. The answer could be base 2, exponent 18 or base 8, exponent 6 or base 10, exponent 5.4185 or base 262144, exponent 1 or base 68,719,476,736 and exponent 0.5
Yes, you can, but it starts getting complicated. You can, for example have a number raised to an exponent that is itself a number raised to an exponent, or you can have a number raised to an exponent and the result raised to another exponent.
yes it can if the exponent is 1.
In exponent form, we have 52 x 62.
It would be 5.04x103
In exponent terms: 2^6 = 64
express 8x8x8x8x8 in exponent form
In exponenet form, it would be 3.3415 x 105
In exponent terms: 26*32*5 = 2880
Scientific Notation is expressed by using a number, using an exponent as a number (usually a decimal) multiplied by a 10, and an exponent (the number on the exponent is the number of zeros the number has).Example: 120,000,000 in scientific notation is 1.2 X 107
1-800-poopface
1-800-poopface
This can't be done with a single exponent, as 325 is not a power of 18. It is however very close, and can be done using two terms with different exponents:182 + 180 = 325So if you were to express it using base 18 notation, it would be "101"
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180.00375
As a product of its prime factors in exponents: 23*32*52 = 1800 Or expressed in scientific notation: 1.8*103