yes
Power = 5 = exponent. That is, exponent = 5.
The exponent is 2 - from the SECOND power.
The exponent is five.
To raise an exponent, you multiply the existing exponent by the new exponent. For example, if you have ( a^m ) and want to raise it to the power of ( n ), you would calculate ( (a^m)^n = a^{m \cdot n} ). This follows the power of a power rule in exponentiation.
105 is a power. 10 is the base and the exponent is 5.
Power = 5 = exponent. That is, exponent = 5.
The exponent is 2 - from the SECOND power.
The exponent.
The exponent is TWO.
The exponent is five.
7 to the sixth power in exponent form is 76
No, you add the powers together.
105 is a power. 10 is the base and the exponent is 5.
The multiple expressed by an exponent?aswner:a power
Exponent=e to the powerPower=m to the power ni.e Power=Generalized exponent
In y = x^n, n is called the exponent while x^n is called a power of n. Power really refers to a power function, which is more than simply the exponent.
1 is the base, 40 is the exponent (140)