Property
For any expression an, a is a factor multiplied by itself n times if n is a positive integer.
The expression an is read a to the nth power. In an, the a is called the base and the n is called the exponent.
an=a⋅a⋅a⋅...⋅a (n factors)
Special names are used for powers of 2 and 3:
a2 is read as 'a squared'
a3 is read as 'a cubed'
Examples
- The expression 5⋅5⋅5⋅5 can be written in exponential notation as 54, where 5 is the base and 4 is the exponent.
- To write y3 in expanded form, you write out the base y multiplied by itself 3 times: y⋅y⋅y.
- To simplify 25, you calculate 2⋅2⋅2⋅2⋅2, which equals 32.
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.