Exponents

A student-friendly guide to understanding exponents, rules, and common mistakes.

What Are Exponents?

An exponent tells you how many times a number is multiplied by itself.

Basic form: an

Read as: “a to the power of n”.

1) Understanding the Meaning

Example: 53

This does NOT mean 5 × 3.

It means:

5 × 5 × 5 = 125

The exponent tells you how many times to use the base as a factor.

2) Common Examples

Expression Meaning Value
24 2×2×2×2 16
32 3×3 9
103 10×10×10 1000

3) Special Exponents

Exponent of 1

a1 = a

Example: 71 = 7

Exponent of 0

a0 = 1   (a ≠ 0)

Example: 50 = 1

Note: Anything (except 0) raised to the 0 power equals 1.

4) Negative Exponents

A negative exponent means take the reciprocal.

a-n = 1 / an

Example:

2-3 = 1 / 23 = 1 / 8

5) Rules of Exponents

Rule 1: Multiply Same Bases

am × an = am+n

Example: 23 × 24 = 27

Rule 2: Divide Same Bases

am ÷ an = am-n

Example: 56 ÷ 52 = 54

Rule 3: Power of a Power

(am)n = am×n

Example: (32)4 = 38

Rule 4: Power of a Product

(ab)n = anbn

Example: (2×3)2 = 22 × 32 = 4 × 9 = 36

Rule 5: Power of a Quotient

(a/b)n = an / bn

6) Common Student Mistakes

7) Real-World Examples

Powers of 10 (Science & Math)

Computer Science Connections

8) Teacher Tip

Memory hook: Exponents tell how many times to multiply — not what to multiply by.