Basic Math

Exponents | Seventh Grade

Exponents - Seventh Grade

Powers, Bases & Scientific Notation

1. Understanding Exponents

Definition

bn

b = Base (number being multiplied)

n = Exponent/Power (how many times)

An exponent tells how many times to multiply the base by itself

• Read as "b to the power of n" or "b to the nth power"

• Special names: b² = "b squared", b³ = "b cubed"

Examples

Exponential FormExpanded FormValue
2 × 2 × 28
5 × 525
3⁴3 × 3 × 3 × 381

2. Evaluating Powers

Steps to Evaluate

Step 1: Identify the base and exponent

Step 2: Multiply the base by itself (exponent) times

Step 3: Calculate the result

Special Exponent Rules

b¹ = b

Any number to the power of 1 equals itself

b⁰ = 1

Any number (except 0) to the power of 0 equals 1

Examples

4³ = 4 × 4 × 4 = 64

10² = 10 × 10 = 100

7¹ = 7

12⁰ = 1

3. Powers with Negative Bases

Sign Rules

EVEN exponent → POSITIVE result

(-base)^(even) = Positive

Example: (-2)⁴ = 16

ODD exponent → NEGATIVE result

(-base)^(odd) = Negative

Example: (-2)³ = -8

Examples

ExpressionExpandedResult
(-3)²(-3) × (-3)9 (positive)
(-3)³(-3) × (-3) × (-3)-27 (negative)
(-2)⁴(-2) × (-2) × (-2) × (-2)16 (positive)
(-5)³(-5) × (-5) × (-5)-125 (negative)

4. Powers with Decimal and Fractional Bases

Decimal Bases

Multiply the decimal by itself (exponent) times

Example 1: (0.5)²

(0.5)² = 0.5 × 0.5 = 0.25

Example 2: (1.2)³

(1.2)³ = 1.2 × 1.2 × 1.2 = 1.728

Fractional Bases

(a/b)ⁿ = aⁿ/bⁿ

Apply exponent to BOTH numerator and denominator

Example: (2/3)³

(2/3)³ = 2³/3³ = 8/27

5. Powers of Ten

Positive Powers of 10

10ⁿ = 1 followed by n zeros

PowerExpandedValue
10¹1010
10²10 × 10100
10³10 × 10 × 101,000
10⁶10 × 10 × 10 × 10 × 10 × 101,000,000

Negative Powers of 10

10⁻ⁿ = 1/(10ⁿ) = 0.000...1

Decimal point moves n places to the left

PowerFractionValue
10⁻¹1/100.1
10⁻²1/1000.01
10⁻³1/1,0000.001

6. Scientific Notation

Definition

Scientific notation expresses numbers as:

a × 10ⁿ

Where: 1 ≤ a < 10

And: n is an integer

Rules for Scientific Notation

Large Numbers (≥ 10):

• Move decimal LEFT → Positive exponent

• Count places moved = exponent value

Small Numbers (< 1):

• Move decimal RIGHT → Negative exponent

• Count places moved = exponent value

Examples

Standard FormScientific Notation
5,0005 × 10³
350,0003.5 × 10⁵
0.0066 × 10⁻³
0.0000252.5 × 10⁻⁵

Converting TO Scientific Notation

Example 1: Convert 42,000 to scientific notation

Move decimal 4 places left: 4.2

Exponent: 4 (positive because number is large)

Answer: 4.2 × 10⁴

Example 2: Convert 0.0078 to scientific notation

Move decimal 3 places right: 7.8

Exponent: -3 (negative because number is small)

Answer: 7.8 × 10⁻³

7. Comparing Numbers in Scientific Notation

Steps to Compare

Step 1: Compare the EXPONENTS first

• Larger exponent = Larger number

Step 2: If exponents are EQUAL, compare the coefficients

• Larger coefficient = Larger number

Examples

Example 1: Compare 3.5 × 10⁵ and 2.8 × 10⁷

Exponents: 5 vs 7

7 > 5, so 2.8 × 10⁷ is larger

Answer: 2.8 × 10⁷ > 3.5 × 10⁵

Example 2: Compare 4.2 × 10⁴ and 6.1 × 10⁴

Exponents are equal: both 10⁴

Compare coefficients: 6.1 > 4.2

Answer: 6.1 × 10⁴ > 4.2 × 10⁴

8. Evaluating Expressions with Exponents

Order of Operations (PEMDAS)

Remember: PEMDAS

Parentheses

Exponents ← Do these SECOND!

Multiplication & Division (left to right)

Addition & Subtraction (left to right)

Example

Evaluate: 2 + 3² × 4

Step 1: Evaluate exponent: 3² = 9

Expression becomes: 2 + 9 × 4

Step 2: Multiply: 9 × 4 = 36

Expression becomes: 2 + 36

Step 3: Add: 2 + 36 = 38

Answer: 38

Quick Reference: Exponent Rules

RuleFormula/Example
Definitionbⁿ = b × b × b... (n times)
Power of 1b¹ = b
Power of 0b⁰ = 1
Negative Base (Even)(-b)^(even) = Positive
Negative Base (Odd)(-b)^(odd) = Negative
Fractional Base(a/b)ⁿ = aⁿ/bⁿ
Powers of 10 (Positive)10ⁿ = 1 followed by n zeros
Powers of 10 (Negative)10⁻ⁿ = 1/(10ⁿ) = 0.000...1
Scientific Notationa × 10ⁿ (where 1 ≤ a < 10)

💡 Important Tips to Remember

Base and exponent: bⁿ means b multiplied n times

Any number to power 1 equals itself: b¹ = b

Any number to power 0 equals 1: b⁰ = 1

Negative base with even exponent = Positive result

Negative base with odd exponent = Negative result

Fractional base: Apply exponent to both numerator and denominator

Powers of 10: Count zeros for positive, decimal places for negative

Scientific notation: Coefficient must be between 1 and 10

Comparing scientific notation: Compare exponents first

PEMDAS: Exponents are evaluated AFTER parentheses

🧠 Memory Tricks & Strategies

Understanding Exponents:

"The exponent tells you how many times - multiply the base, that's the rhyme!"

Negative Bases:

"Even power makes it bright - odd power keeps the negative in sight!"

Power of 0 and 1:

"Zero power? Answer is one! One power? Keep what you've begun!"

Powers of 10:

"Count the zeros, that's the power - ten to the n every hour!"

Scientific Notation:

"Big numbers go left, exponent's up high - small numbers go right, negative's the sky!"

Fractional Bases:

"Power on a fraction? Top and bottom too - apply to both, that's what you do!"

Master Exponents! 📐 ⚡

Remember: Exponents show repeated multiplication - practice makes perfect!

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