Asked by nick
(-5.1)^0
a. 1 <<
b. 0
c. -5.1
d. -1
3g^-2 b^2
a. 3b^2/g^2
b. 3g^2 b^-2 <<<
c. 3gb^-4
d. b^2/3g^2
3/g^-2 h^3
a. 3/g^2 h^3 <<
b. 3g^2/h^3
c. 6g/h^3
d. 3/gh
a. 1 <<
b. 0
c. -5.1
d. -1
3g^-2 b^2
a. 3b^2/g^2
b. 3g^2 b^-2 <<<
c. 3gb^-4
d. b^2/3g^2
3/g^-2 h^3
a. 3/g^2 h^3 <<
b. 3g^2/h^3
c. 6g/h^3
d. 3/gh
Answers
Answered by
Steve
ok
3g^-2 b^2 = 3b^2/g^2
negative exponents are in the denominator
3/g^-2 = 3g^2
So, 3/g^-2 h^3 = 3g^2 h^3
missing parentheses?
3g^-2 b^2 = 3b^2/g^2
negative exponents are in the denominator
3/g^-2 = 3g^2
So, 3/g^-2 h^3 = 3g^2 h^3
missing parentheses?
Answered by
nick
SO is all of them correct?
Answered by
Damon
2 were wrong, he told you what was wrong.
Answered by
nick
Ok. I changed.
number two to a
number three to b
number two to a
number three to b
Answered by
Damon
That is fine as long as you did not skip any parentheses when you typed the question as Steve asked. We are all assuming that h^3 is in the numerator.
Answered by
Pride
Number 1. Anything that is squared by 0 is automatically equal to 1.
Number 2. and 3. When you square something you are just multiplying it by itself. So if I have 6^2 It would be 6*6. Same with others. 6^3 6^4 6^7 you are just taking the first number and multiplying it by itself however many times it is powered. Hope that helps!
Number 2. and 3. When you square something you are just multiplying it by itself. So if I have 6^2 It would be 6*6. Same with others. 6^3 6^4 6^7 you are just taking the first number and multiplying it by itself however many times it is powered. Hope that helps!
Answered by
Trouble maker
1. A
2. A
3. B
4. A
5. C
These are the answers for anyone that needs them
2. A
3. B
4. A
5. C
These are the answers for anyone that needs them
Answered by
lilmeowmeow
Trouble maker is correct!
Answered by
>.<
trouble maker 100% correct as of 9/29/22
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