When the bases are the same, you can combine the exponents.
x³ [x is where the base is]
For example:
x³ · y² = x³y² You can't simplify this anymore because they have different bases/variables
[when you multiply a variable with an exponent by a variable with an exponent, you add the exponents together] so:
x² · x³ = 
[when you multiply a variable with an exponent by an exponent, you multiply the exponents together] so:
(x³)²=

I hope this helps you
|HJ|=20/3 pi
|HJ|=4/9pi÷360.pi.r^2
20/3=4/9÷360.pi.r^2
20.270÷pi=r^2
5400÷3=r^2
1800=r^2
r=30 square root of 2
For this case, we have initially had 42 tickets.
Then Ethan and his brother sold the same amount of tickets to end up with 8.
Then, we can propose the following equation:

Where x and y represent the amount of tickets sold by Ethan and his brother respectively. Since each sold the same amount, then x = y:

Thus, each sold 17 tickets.
Answer:
Each brother sold 17 tickets
Its 81 Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
<em>0.6 ÷ 0.3 - Option 2.</em>
<em>0.2 × 0.9 - Option 3.</em>