1.1 X 108
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Zeros are superfluous.
110,000,000
One hundred and ten million.
you do not do anything when you add numbers with exponents. you just figure out the answer. it is only if you multiply numbers with exponents, where you add the exponents..
Add the exponents
The laws of exponents work the same with rational exponents, the difference being they use fractions not integers.
669651, 110000000, 306400000, 516766000
110,000,000
One hundred and ten million.
30 110000000 4 sticks in each 0 and one in 1
The exponents are added.
you do not do anything when you add numbers with exponents. you just figure out the answer. it is only if you multiply numbers with exponents, where you add the exponents..
nth root (a) = a^(1/n) mth root a^(1/m) a^(1/n) + a^(1/m) = a^(1/n) + a^(1/m) However. when multiplying a^(1/n) X a^(1/m) = a^([m + n]/[mn]) Think of addition of fractions , where the exponents are concerned. NB This can only be done when the coefficient 'a' is the same for both numbers. NNB a^(1/n) means the 'n th root' of 'a'.
To write 110 million in expanded notation using exponents, we first need to understand that 110 million is the same as 110,000,000. In expanded notation, we break down the number into its constituent parts based on the place value of each digit. Therefore, 110 million can be expressed in expanded notation using exponents as 1.1 x 10^8, where 1.1 represents the digits before the decimal point and 10^8 represents the place value of the digits after the decimal point.
Add the exponents
The laws of exponents work the same with rational exponents, the difference being they use fractions not integers.
When multiplying something with exponents, you add it. When dividing something with exponents, you subtract it.
You can have negative exponents anywhere. When they are in the denominator, they are equivalent to positive exponents in the numerator of a fraction.