There are four: 1, -3, 3.5 and -16The first of these is implicit, not explicit.
It is called a power. If the power is 2, it is read as "squared and if the power is 3 it is read as "cubed", otherwise is is read as "to the power of ..."
In algebra, a base refers to the number that is raised to a power. For example, in the expression 2^3, the base is 2. The exponent indicates how many times the base is multiplied by itself.
x0 = 1 because any number raised to the power of 0 is always equal to 1
What a number is raised to. Three (the base) to the third power = 33 = 3*3*3 The power or the exponent tells us how many times the base takes place in a repeated multiplication.
In the expression 2x, the 2 is the coefficient. It tells you how many of the x you need.
There are four: 1, -3, 3.5 and -16The first of these is implicit, not explicit.
In exponential form, 64 can be expressed in at least four ways. These are 64 raised to the first power, 2 raised to the sixth power, 4 raised to the fourth power, and 8 raised to the second power.
Seven, though they can be reduced to 3 if like terms are combined.
Subscripts state how many atoms and Coefficients state how many molecules there are. So when balancing an equation you always adjust the coefficients. When this equation is balanced, what is the coefficient for Ni(NOËÄ)ËÄ? 4
2400000000
The exponent is the small raised number (the superscript) that tells how many times a factor is used.
The base is the number that is going to be raised to a power.
The number that indicates how many times the base is used as a factor is the exponent, or power.
It is called a power. If the power is 2, it is read as "squared and if the power is 3 it is read as "cubed", otherwise is is read as "to the power of ..."
50x1031x1.6x10 raised to the power -19 coulambs
In algebra, a base refers to the number that is raised to a power. For example, in the expression 2^3, the base is 2. The exponent indicates how many times the base is multiplied by itself.