multiply
Flip the fraction top-to-bottom, and delete the minus sign from the exponent.
I assume you are asking for the exponent when 60 is raised to a power. Since 60 is a composite number, there is no specific exponent that corresponds to it. The exponent depends on the specific equation or problem you are working on.
15
If you have the same base on both of the exponents that you are dividing, all you have to do is subtract the exponent. For example if I have a problem like: 66/ 63, your answer will be 63.
multiply
Flip the fraction top-to-bottom, and delete the minus sign from the exponent.
Depends on the problem.
I assume you are asking for the exponent when 60 is raised to a power. Since 60 is a composite number, there is no specific exponent that corresponds to it. The exponent depends on the specific equation or problem you are working on.
15
If you have the same base on both of the exponents that you are dividing, all you have to do is subtract the exponent. For example if I have a problem like: 66/ 63, your answer will be 63.
The answer could be exponential representation but, given the limited amount of information in the question, it is hard to be sure.
Big number with exponents times another # with exponent s
i think it is an exponent hard to describe without seeing
If a number (other than 0) has 0 as an exponent, it equals 1! It may be hard to believe but it is true, no matter what number. If a number has no exponent, there is basically an invisible 1 as the exponent, so the number would be equal to itself. Zero with the exponent zero is meaningless.
12 is the base, 3 is the exponent.
(1/2)-5 = 32