In the number 25 the exponent is 5. Whereas, 2 is the base.
Power = 5 = exponent. That is, exponent = 5.
52 (5 is the base and 2 is the exponent or power). The 2 says to multiply 5 by itself 2 times. 5*5 = 25
It is 2 and power of 5
As far as I know, there is no no word that describes the exponent 5, besides the phrase "raised to the fifth power".
The exponent is 2 - from the SECOND power.
It is 2 and power of 5
That number becomes an exponent. For example, 5 to the -2 power is 1/25
Base 6, exponent 5.
Answer: 1 Something like 52 is called a power. The base is 5 and the exponent is 2. If the exponent is not given it is assumed to be one, so that 760 = 7601. The exponent is 1.
Yes they are the same thing, they are just called different things when used in sentences. for example 5 squared would be to the second power and the exponent would be 2.
6^5/6^3 exponent on top subtract exponent on bottom and factor, 6, is eliminated on bottom 5 - 3 = 2 = 6^2 You can do this on a calculator just as shown ( My TI-84 does this ) and get 36, which is 6^2.
The base number of an exponant is the number that you are multiplying by. For example, 5 to the power of 2. multiply 5 by itself 2 times.
A negative exponent is 1 over the base to the power of the absolute value of the exponent. For example 2 to the power of -1 is 1/2, 2 to the power of -2 is 1/4, or (1/2) squared, and 2 to the power of -3 is 1/8, or (1/2) cubed.
If the bases are the same then just do simple exponent addition just add hte exponents eg 2 to the power of 5 + 2 to the power of 3 = 2 to the power of 5+3 =2 to the power of 8 this can also be simplified to 1 to the power of 4
9.5367432x10^13
An exponent is the power that a number is raised to. For instance, in the expression 3^2 ("three squared"), 2 is the "exponent" and 3 is the "base." A positive exponent just means that the power is a positive number. For instance, the following expression does not involve a positive exponent: 3^(-2). Horses rule!!!!!
Since 25 = 5 * 5, it can also be written as 5^2 (or five squared)