Exponents and Scientific Notation
Across
- 5. – The result of raising a base to an exponent.
- 6. – The number that is repeatedly multiplied by itself in a power.
- 8. Notation – A way to write very large or small numbers using powers of ten.
- 10. – Numbers that do not change in a math expression.
- 11. — The base number used in powers for scientific notation.
- 12. – What you do when combining numbers to increase their total.
- 13. Root – A number that, when multiplied by itself, gives the original number.
- 15. – What happens when you increase a number by combining equal groups.
- 17. – A flipped fraction; when multiplied by the original, equals one.
- 20. – What a number is multiplied by when it is squared.
- 21. – What two values are if they are equal in amount.
- 22. – Rules that describe how exponents or operations work.
Down
- 1. Root – A number that, when multiplied by itself three times, gives the original number.
- 2. – The result of multiplying a number by itself once.
- 3. – Describes numbers greater than zero or exponents that mean normal multiplication.
- 4. – The answer you get after multiplying numbers together.
- 7. – What happens when you take one number away from another.
- 9. – The result of multiplying a number by itself three times.
- 14. – The small raised number that shows how many times to multiply the base.
- 16. – Describes numbers less than zero or an exponent that means to take a reciprocal.
- 18. – The mathematical “opposite” operation, like addition vs. subtraction.
- 19. – The identity number that keeps values the same when multiplied.