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No. Any number raised to a power is not prime.
Any non-zero integer raised to the power of zero is equal to 1.
Yes.
No. A negative integer raised to the third power will yield a negative number that is less than the integer. Only whole numbers (positive integers greater than or equal to 1) have the property where that integer raised to the third power is greater than or equal to the integer.
They are the integer powers of that variable.
Yes (when the power is a positive integer). It is possible to have powers that are negative, rational, irrational and even complex and there are similar rules for dealing with them.
no nothing can be multiplied to get a prime number
A scientific number is expressed in the form a*10^b where where a is a number written in decimal form and 1
a quantity expressed asa number raised to a power
Numbers that are raised to an exponent either increase or decrease at an extremely fast rate.
Scientific notation is a way of writing numbers that are too big or too small to be conveniently written in decimal form. In normalized scientific notation all numbers are written in the form a x 10^b (a times ten raised to the power of b) where a is a nonzero single-digit integer and b is an integer. 953 in scientific notation is 9.53 x 10^2
In exponential form, 64 can be expressed in at least four ways. These are 64 raised to the first power, 2 raised to the sixth power, 4 raised to the fourth power, and 8 raised to the second power.