2/5
2
001100 Starting from the right the position value of each digit is as follows 0 x 2 to power zero = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 0 x 2 to power one = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 1 x 2 to power two = 4 1 x 2 to power three = 8 0 x 2 to power four = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 0 x 2 to power five = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) Adding all we get the decimal equivalent of 12
Any number to the power of zero is always 1
Yes. Any number to the 0 power is 1
2/5
2/5
To write 4.026 in words, you would say "four point zero two six." The number 4 is read as "four," the decimal point is read as "point," the number 0 after the decimal point is read as "zero," the number 2 is read as "two," and the number 6 is read as "six." So, altogether, it is "four point zero two six."
2
Yes. It's the ratio of -4 to 100, of 4 to -100, of -1 to 25, of 2 to -50, etc.
001100 Starting from the right the position value of each digit is as follows 0 x 2 to power zero = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 0 x 2 to power one = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 1 x 2 to power two = 4 1 x 2 to power three = 8 0 x 2 to power four = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) 0 x 2 to power five = 0 (mult by zero, does not matter what 2 is powered to) Adding all we get the decimal equivalent of 12
There are four significant figures in 149.0. The trailing zero after the decimal point indicates that it is significant.
Any number to the power of zero is always 1
Yes. Any number to the 0 power is 1
2
You could write "zero point two". You could write "two-tenths".
With the exception of 00 (which is undefined), any number to the power of zero is equal to 1.