if you divide a number with exponents bye a number with exponents you subtract the exponents. For example A^6 / A^4 = A^2 We get this because A^6 is A*A*A*A*A*A over A*A*A*A The four A's cancel out four of the A's on top so you are left with two A's so the answer is A^2
exponents can be found in math formulas and wen multiplying the same number. exponents can be found in math formulas and wen multiplying the same number.
nothing, keep the exponents the same, remember you can only add or subtract when the exponents are the same
You can have an infinite number of different exponents on a base number, you would then have an infinite amount of different numbers.
It is: 2*5*7 = 70 and no exponents are needed
In algebraic equations, exponents can contain variables. They can be solved for by using logarithmic rules for exponents.
dissimilar terms are terms that do not have the same variable or the variable do not contain the same number of exponents
You sole exponents by multiplying the hole number by the exponent.
if you divide a number with exponents bye a number with exponents you subtract the exponents. For example A^6 / A^4 = A^2 We get this because A^6 is A*A*A*A*A*A over A*A*A*A The four A's cancel out four of the A's on top so you are left with two A's so the answer is A^2
exponents can be found in math formulas and wen multiplying the same number. exponents can be found in math formulas and wen multiplying the same number.
You add exponents when multiplying. Ex: (xm) × (xn) = xm+n
nothing, keep the exponents the same, remember you can only add or subtract when the exponents are the same
You can have an infinite number of different exponents on a base number, you would then have an infinite amount of different numbers.
it is a number on the top right of the number which shows how many times to multiply the base by itself. for example: 23=2x2x2 2 is the base, 3 is the exponent.
are known as like terms.
yes it can so 2x2x2x2 can become 24
Exponents are numbers that simplify the amount of times a number multiplies by itself. For example, 5^3 would be equal to 5x5x5 which equals 125. In that same number, 5 would be the base and 3 would be the exponent, (aka) the little number on the top right of another number. And yes, exponents CAN have exponents.