10 to the fifth power, or 1.0 x 10 to the sixth power.
The exponent is five.
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.
As far as I know, there is no no word that describes the exponent 5, besides the phrase "raised to the fifth power".
It is 4 to the power 5 = 1024 Which is the same as 2 the power of 10 = 1024
3^(5) = 3 x 3 x 3 x 3 x 3 = 243 The word 'exponent' can also be shown as ' index number' or 'power'.
10 to the fifth power, or 1.0 x 10 to the sixth power.
The exponent is five.
no i cantgfsar
No. An expression can have a variable exponent (for instance, 2 to the power x, or x to the power y), but that is no longer a polynomial.
i am assuming you mean a number with the exponent like this... x2 x5 From my knowledge of math and calculus this just means that the x with the five means its the fifth point along that line or graph. It does not mean you numerically multiply that x by five or that x is to the fifth power. Just means its the second or fifth in the series of x's. In this series of x's there is also a plain ol' "x" and "x3" and "x4". If you have a number you must have all the preceding numbers before it.
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.
The base is six. Five is the exponent. (65)
As far as I know, there is no no word that describes the exponent 5, besides the phrase "raised to the fifth power".
It is 4 to the power 5 = 1024 Which is the same as 2 the power of 10 = 1024
4^5 5 is the exponent.
Oh, dude, factoring with an exponent to the power of 4 is like breaking up with your high school sweetheart - it's complicated but doable. You basically look for common factors and use the power rule to simplify it. So, you're just dividing the exponent by 4 and seeing what's left. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!