2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 5 x 5 x 5
The second statement.
Prime Factorization of 9 is 3x3=9 So it is 3 to the second power
5^2 I believe the answer is Five Squared (five to the second power)
25
36 = 729 and 310 = 5904936 = 729 and 310 = 5904936 = 729 and 310 = 5904936 = 729 and 310 = 59049
102 = 100 and the prime factors of 100 in exponents are 22*52 = 100
As a product of its prime factors: 7*31 = 217
Without knowing the specific reaction being referred to, it is impossible to determine the second product. In chemical reactions, the products depend on the reactants and conditions involved. To identify the second product, the specific reaction equation must be provided.
This can be seen clearly in the case of positive integer exponents, from the definition of powers as repeated multiplications. Here is an example (I will use the symbol "^" for powers): 10^2 x 10^3 = (10 x 10) x (10 x 10 x 10) = 10^5 As you can see, in this example - and in any similar example you can invent - when you write out the factors, you get as many factors as there are factors in the individual parts. In the above example, the first part has two factors, the second part has three factors, so if you combine them, you have five (2 + 3) factors. For zero, negative, or non-integer exponents, the rule still applies; in this case, it is simply defined this way for consistency.
Without a second number explicitly specified, it is impossible to work out the answer to this sum.
the prime factorization of 12 in exponents is 2 to the second power times 3
10 to the seventh power - or 10,000,000. When multiplying numbers with exponents - you add the exponents together.
You add exponents, so it is 10 to the 4th power, which is 10000
7 to the second power = 49 (That's 7 times 7)
If you multiply a number by itself, you can also call it the square of the number, the second power of the number, or the number to the power 2.
9 = 3 ^ 2, or three raised to the second power.
Exponents are usually written like this: 3^2 means "3 to the second power". Square roots are often written with sqrt in front, such as as sqrt(5)