Base 6, exponent 5.
The base of an exponent is the main number. For example in 56 the number 5 is the base and 6 is the exponent.
It is: 36 = 729
A number does not have an exponent in isolation. It has an exponent in the context of a base. The same number can have different combinations of base and exponent. A base cannot be zero but usually it is restricted to positive real numbers. In higher mathematics, the most common base is the irrational (even transcendental) number e = 2.71828...Thus 216 = 216^1 or 10^2.3345 or e^5.3753 or 6^3 or 36^1.5 and so on.
8
6^36 is approx 1.0314*10^28 or 10.314 octillion.
Yes, 6 is the base and 2 is the exponent in 6^2. To solve, 6 * 6 = 36 since we know that an exponent is not, in this instance, 6 * 2, but 6 * 6. If it was 6^3, the answer would be 6 * 6 * 6 = 216.
Base 6, exponent 5.
The base of an exponent is the main number. For example in 56 the number 5 is the base and 6 is the exponent.
The two are related. The answer could be base 2, exponent 18 or base 8, exponent 6 or base 10, exponent 5.4185 or base 262144, exponent 1 or base 68,719,476,736 and exponent 0.5
It is: 36 = 729
The answer is 36.
6 squared
That depends by what you mean by "with an exponent". If you meant an exponent as in "to the power of" then 6 ** 2 = 6 * 6 = 36 If you meant the exponent in scientific notation then 6E2 = 6 * 10 ** 2 = 600
6^2, 62, 36
A number does not have an exponent in isolation. It has an exponent in the context of a base. The same number can have different combinations of base and exponent. A base cannot be zero but usually it is restricted to positive real numbers. In higher mathematics, the most common base is the irrational (even transcendental) number e = 2.71828...Thus 216 = 216^1 or 10^2.3345 or e^5.3753 or 6^3 or 36^1.5 and so on.
You can define any base you like and calculate an appropriate exponent or, you can pick an exponent and calculate the base. So you can have base 25, with exponent 2 or base 5 and exonent 4 or base e (the base for natural logarithms) and exponent 6.437752 (to 6 dp) or base 10 and exponent 2.795880 (to 6 dp) or base 2 and exponent 9.287712 etc or base 8.54988 (to 3 dp) and exponent 3 or base 3.623898 (to 3 dp) and exponent 5 etc There is no need for the base to be an integer or even rational. Probably the most important bases in advanced mathematics is e, which is a transcendental number. Similarly, there is no need for the exponent to be an integer.