Learn on PengiBig Ideas Math, Advanced 2Chapter 10: Exponents and Scientific Notation

Section 10.1: Exponents

In this Grade 7 lesson from Big Ideas Math Advanced 2, students learn to write and evaluate expressions using integer exponents, understanding how a base and exponent together form a power representing repeated multiplication. The lesson covers writing products in exponential notation, evaluating powers with negative bases, and applying order of operations to expressions that include exponents. Real-life contexts, such as astronomical distances and geometric volume, reinforce how exponent notation is used to represent very large and very small numbers efficiently.

Section 1

Exponents

Property

An exponent is a number that appears above and to the right of a particular factor. It tells us how many times that factor occurs in the expression. The factor to which the exponent applies is called the base, and the product is called a power of the base.
An exponent indicates repeated multiplication.

an=aaaa(n factors of a)a^n = a \cdot a \cdot a \cdots a \quad (n \text{ factors of } a)

where nn is a positive integer.

Examples

  • To compute 535^3, we multiply three factors of 5: 555=1255 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 = 125.
  • The expression (14)2(\frac{1}{4})^2 means 1414=116\frac{1}{4} \cdot \frac{1}{4} = \frac{1}{16}.

Section 2

Exponential Notation

Property

For any expression ana^n, aa is a factor multiplied by itself nn times if nn is a positive integer.
The expression ana^n is read aa to the nthn^{th} power. In ana^n, the aa is called the base and the nn is called the exponent.
an=aaa...aa^n = a \cdot a \cdot a \cdot ... \cdot a (nn factors)
Special names are used for powers of 2 and 3:
a2a^2 is read as 'aa squared'
a3a^3 is read as 'aa cubed'

Examples

  • The expression 55555 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 can be written in exponential notation as 545^4, where 5 is the base and 4 is the exponent.
  • To write y3y^3 in expanded form, you write out the base yy multiplied by itself 3 times: yyyy \cdot y \cdot y.
  • To simplify 252^5, you calculate 222222 \cdot 2 \cdot 2 \cdot 2 \cdot 2, which equals 3232.

Explanation

Exponents are a shortcut for writing repeated multiplication. The small exponent number tells you how many times to multiply the larger base number by itself. This makes it much faster to write out long calculations involving the same factor.

Section 3

Powers of Negative Numbers

Property

To show that a negative number is raised to a power, we enclose the negative number in parentheses. For example, to indicate the square of 5-5, we write

(5)2=(5)(5)=25(-5)^2 = (-5)(-5) = 25

If the negative number is not enclosed in parentheses, the exponent applies only to the positive number.

52=(55)=25-5^2 = -(5 \cdot 5) = -25

Examples

  • To calculate (3)4(-3)^4, we multiply four factors of 3-3: (3)(3)(3)(3)=81(-3)(-3)(-3)(-3) = 81.
  • The expression 34-3^4 means the negative of 343^4, so we calculate 3333=813 \cdot 3 \cdot 3 \cdot 3 = 81 and then apply the negative sign to get 81-81.

Book overview

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Chapter 10: Exponents and Scientific Notation

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Section 10.1: Exponents

  2. Lesson 2

    Section 10.2: Product of Powers Property

  3. Lesson 3

    Section 10.3: Quotient of Powers Property

  4. Lesson 4

    Section 10.4: Zero and Negative Exponents

  5. Lesson 5

    Section 10.5: Reading Scientific Notation

  6. Lesson 6

    Section 10.6: Writing Scientific Notation

  7. Lesson 7

    Section 10.7: Operations in Scientific Notation

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Exponents

Property

An exponent is a number that appears above and to the right of a particular factor. It tells us how many times that factor occurs in the expression. The factor to which the exponent applies is called the base, and the product is called a power of the base.
An exponent indicates repeated multiplication.

an=aaaa(n factors of a)a^n = a \cdot a \cdot a \cdots a \quad (n \text{ factors of } a)

where nn is a positive integer.

Examples

  • To compute 535^3, we multiply three factors of 5: 555=1255 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 = 125.
  • The expression (14)2(\frac{1}{4})^2 means 1414=116\frac{1}{4} \cdot \frac{1}{4} = \frac{1}{16}.

Section 2

Exponential Notation

Property

For any expression ana^n, aa is a factor multiplied by itself nn times if nn is a positive integer.
The expression ana^n is read aa to the nthn^{th} power. In ana^n, the aa is called the base and the nn is called the exponent.
an=aaa...aa^n = a \cdot a \cdot a \cdot ... \cdot a (nn factors)
Special names are used for powers of 2 and 3:
a2a^2 is read as 'aa squared'
a3a^3 is read as 'aa cubed'

Examples

  • The expression 55555 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 \cdot 5 can be written in exponential notation as 545^4, where 5 is the base and 4 is the exponent.
  • To write y3y^3 in expanded form, you write out the base yy multiplied by itself 3 times: yyyy \cdot y \cdot y.
  • To simplify 252^5, you calculate 222222 \cdot 2 \cdot 2 \cdot 2 \cdot 2, which equals 3232.

Explanation

Exponents are a shortcut for writing repeated multiplication. The small exponent number tells you how many times to multiply the larger base number by itself. This makes it much faster to write out long calculations involving the same factor.

Section 3

Powers of Negative Numbers

Property

To show that a negative number is raised to a power, we enclose the negative number in parentheses. For example, to indicate the square of 5-5, we write

(5)2=(5)(5)=25(-5)^2 = (-5)(-5) = 25

If the negative number is not enclosed in parentheses, the exponent applies only to the positive number.

52=(55)=25-5^2 = -(5 \cdot 5) = -25

Examples

  • To calculate (3)4(-3)^4, we multiply four factors of 3-3: (3)(3)(3)(3)=81(-3)(-3)(-3)(-3) = 81.
  • The expression 34-3^4 means the negative of 343^4, so we calculate 3333=813 \cdot 3 \cdot 3 \cdot 3 = 81 and then apply the negative sign to get 81-81.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 10: Exponents and Scientific Notation

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Section 10.1: Exponents

  2. Lesson 2

    Section 10.2: Product of Powers Property

  3. Lesson 3

    Section 10.3: Quotient of Powers Property

  4. Lesson 4

    Section 10.4: Zero and Negative Exponents

  5. Lesson 5

    Section 10.5: Reading Scientific Notation

  6. Lesson 6

    Section 10.6: Writing Scientific Notation

  7. Lesson 7

    Section 10.7: Operations in Scientific Notation