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GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Ever heard of a "living document"? They eat and breathe just like the rest of us! They even walk around on their own two legs. Okay, fine—maybe t...
History Trivia: Operation Tiger 24 Views
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Description:
Fun fact: some performers believe that a bad dress rehearsal portends a great opening night. Not-so-fun fact: a war zone isn’t the best place to test this theory.
Transcript
- 00:04
Powers, a la Shmoop.
- 00:06
Sometimes, the greatest power comes in the smallest packages. [Gift box opens and glove punches girl in the face]
- 00:09
Take David for example. Goliath never knew what hit him.
- 00:13
How about Napoleon? He certainly didn’t win any battles because of his height.
- 00:17
There’s a reason we have something in math called a “power.” [Teacher discussing powers]
Full Transcript
- 00:19
It’s small and unassuming…but it packs quite a punch.
- 00:23
Also referred to as an “exponent,” a power is a way of abbreviating very large numbers
- 00:29
in order to make them manageable. See that itty-bitty number, up and to the [Arrow points to a 3 exponent]
- 00:33
right of the other number? That guy’s the exponent.
- 00:37
An exponent can take an expression like 5 times 5 times 5 times 5, and express it this way:
- 00:45
We’re multiplying four 5’s together, so our exponent is a 4.
- 00:49
Or, as we might say, we are taking “5 to the fourth power.”
- 00:53
Sometimes you’ll have a bunch more numbers to multiply together than just four of ‘em.
- 00:57
But life’s too precious to waste it multiplying zillions of numbers the long way…hence the shortcut. [Lots of numbers as girl takes shortcut]
- 01:03
What about when the power is 1? Because our exponent is telling us that there
- 01:07
is only one seven, he doesn’t get multiplied by anything else.
- 01:10
So it’s the same as plain ol’ seven. When a power is zero, however, the number
- 01:15
is always equal to one. [Teacher drawing 7 to the power of 0]
- 01:18
Which…really is the loneliest number. We’ve been there. [Man sat waiting at a table]
- 01:22
Moving on…an exponent can also be negative.
- 01:26
In that case, you’ll need to take the reciprocal of the number…[Young boy performs a back flip]
- 01:29
…and then change the exponent to a positive number.
- 01:32
So, for example, if you’ve got 2 to the negative third power…
- 01:36
…it’s the same as the reciprocal of 2… one-half… to the third power.
- 01:41
½ times ½ times ½… is one-eighth.
- 01:45
So, as you can see, they may not look like much, but powers are quite…powerful. [Man working out in a gym]
- 01:50
They can abbreviate many big numbers…
- 01:53
…and they can reduce others to rubble.
- 01:56
Have fun on your power trip. Don't forget to send us a postcard. [People walking with luggage]
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