Exponent
The formula for aluminum nitrate is Al(NO3)3, so there are 9 oxygen atoms. Multiply the number of oxygen atoms inside the parentheses times the subscript outside the parentheses.
Find number of moles of phosphorusmolar mass of phosphorus is 30.97g/moldivide mass by molar mass to get the moles of phosphorus please that your molar mass mast be multiplied by 4 because you have four phosphorus atoms. 30.97*4= 123.88 g/moln= m/M = 62.0g/123.88g/mol= 0.50 molesTheoretically, there are 6 times the number of moles in fluorine than there are in phosphorus because of the ratio 1:6 but fluorine is diatomic gas so we multiply the number of moles by 12 instead of 6. 6 from the ratio times from fluorine being diatomic gas.So 0.5*12=6 moles of fluorine. we multiply that by the molar mass of fluorine multiplied by 12 because we 12fluorine atoms.So, 6= m/228g/mol so to find mass of fluorine we multiply moles times molar mass it gives us 1368g.
Two times Avogadro's number (6.022×10 to the 23)
Find the force: F=mg Then take F and multiply it times the height to get work. Take that work then multiply that by 4, to get 4x the work. Take your work then convert it it from J to KJ by dividing by 1000. (Multiply that by the % efficiency if applicable) Divide that answer by -1273.3 which is the glucose. That will give you how many moles. Take the number of moles and multiple by 180, which is molar of mass of Glucose. It will probably be negative. Just drop the sign and enter it into mastering chemistry, and you should be fine.
times the amount of centimetres by ten e.g. 1cm = 10mm, 2cm = 20mm
the exponent
its the beard it makes me look like santa.
The exponent.
it is called an exponent and you multiply c by itself as many times as the exponent tells you. sorry if this doesn't help
The exponent tells that.
You multiply the base number by itself as many times as the exponent tells you. Example 4^4 =4•4•4•4= 256
You multiply the number by itself 115 times.
It is the exponent and tells you how many times the base is to be multiplied.
The exponent
An exponent is used to indicate that a number is multiplied by itself a specified number of times. For example, to multiply 4 by itself 9 times, you would write 49.
Base and exponent are the two parts of a power. The base is the lower left, normal-sized, number. The exponent is the upper-right, small (i.e., superscript) number. For example, in: 34 3 is the base, 4 is the exponent. In the simplest case, a power specifies a repeated multiplication. The base tells you what number to multiply by itself, the exponent tells you how many times to multiply it. Thus, 34 = 3 x 3 x 3 x 3 (that is, multiply 3 by itself, using the number 4 times as a factor)
To square a number you multiply it by itself, to cube a number you then multiply itself twice! i.e. 3 times 3 is 9 and 9 times 3 is then 27 so 27 is 3 cubed