Exponents & Powers Practice Quiz with a Step-by-Step Interactive Lesson
Use the quiz at the top of the page to practice exponents and powers and master the laws of exponents (also called exponent rules): evaluate powers, use the product of powers rule \(\big(a^m a^n=a^{m+n}\big)\), use the quotient of powers rule \(\big(\frac{a^m}{a^n}=a^{m-n}\big)\), apply the power of a power rule \(\big((a^m)^n=a^{mn}\big)\), and handle zero exponents and negative exponents. If you want a refresher, click Start lesson to open a step-by-step guide with worked examples and quick checks.
How this exponents and powers practice works
1. Take the quiz: answer the exponents questions at the top of the page.
2. Open the lesson (optional): review exponent rules with examples and quick checks.
3. Retry: return to the quiz and simplify powers faster and more accurately.
What you will learn in the exponents and powers lesson
Foundations & vocabulary
Base and exponent in \(a^n\), and what "power" means
Exponentiation as repeated multiplication (for \(n\ge 1\))
Common values like \(a^1=a\), and careful reading of parentheses
Hint: Any nonzero number raised to the power \(0\) equals \(1\).
Pre-check 2: Simplify \(2^3 \times 2^4\).
Hint: When you multiply powers with the same base, you add the exponents.
Exponent Basics
What an exponent means
Learning goal: Read exponent notation correctly and evaluate simple powers.
Key idea
A power like \(a^n\) means the base \(a\) is multiplied by itself \(n\) times (when \(n\ge 1\)): \[ a^n=\underbrace{a\cdot a\cdot a\cdots a}_{n\text{ factors}}. \] Two useful facts: \(a^1=a\) and \(10^n\) is a 1 followed by \(n\) zeros (for \(n\ge 1\)).
Worked example
Example: Evaluate \(4^3\).
\[ 4^3=4\cdot 4\cdot 4=16\cdot 4=64. \]
Try it
Try it 1: What is \(5^2\)?
Hint: \(5^2=5\cdot 5\).
Try it 2: What is \(10^3\)?
Hint: \(10^3=10\cdot 10\cdot 10\).
Summary
\(a^n\) means multiply \(a\) by itself \(n\) times (for \(n\ge 1\)).
\(a^1=a\). Parentheses matter: \((-2)^2≠ -2^2\).
Product of Powers
Multiply powers with the same base
Learning goal: Use the product rule to multiply powers quickly (without expanding).
Key idea
When you multiply powers with the same base, you add exponents: \[ a^m\cdot a^n=a^{m+n}. \] This works because you are combining factors of the same base.
Worked example
Example: Multiply \(3^3 \times 3^1\).
\[ 3^3\cdot 3^1=3^{3+1}=3^4=81. \]
Try it
Try it 1: Multiply \(2^3 \times 2^2\).
Hint: Same base \(2\). Add exponents: \(3+2\).
Try it 2: Compute \(4^1 \times 4^2\).
Hint: Same base \(4\). Add exponents: \(1+2\).
Summary
Product of powers (same base): \(a^m\cdot a^n=a^{m+n}\).
Do not add exponents if the bases are different.
Quotient of Powers
Divide powers with the same base
Learning goal: Use the quotient rule to simplify division and understand why \(a^0=1\) (when \(a≠ 0\)).
Key idea
When you divide powers with the same base (and \(a≠ 0\)), you subtract exponents: \[ \frac{a^m}{a^n}=a^{m-n}. \] A key special case is \(m=n\): \[ \frac{a^m}{a^m}=a^{m-m}=a^0=1. \]
Worked example
Example: Simplify \(\dfrac{7^2}{7^1}\).
\[ \frac{7^2}{7^1}=7^{2-1}=7^1=7. \]
Try it
Try it 1: Simplify \(\dfrac{2^6}{2^4}\).
Hint: Same base \(2\). Subtract exponents: \(6-4\).
Try it 2: What is \(\dfrac{4^3}{4^3}\)?
Hint: Any nonzero number divided by itself equals \(1\). This is also \(4^0\).
Summary
Quotient of powers (same base, \(a≠ 0\)): \(\dfrac{a^m}{a^n}=a^{m-n}\).
Special case: \(\dfrac{a^m}{a^m}=a^0=1\).
Power Rules
Power of a power: \((a^m)^n\)
Learning goal: Use parentheses correctly and apply the power of a power rule.
Key idea
When you raise a power to another power, you multiply exponents: \[ (a^m)^n=a^{mn}. \] This is one of the most common exponent rules in algebra and pre-algebra.
Worked example
Example: What is \((2^3)^2\)?
\[ (2^3)^2=2^{3\cdot 2}=2^6=64. \]
Try it
Try it 1: What is \((2^1)^4\)?
Hint: \((2^1)^4=2^{1\cdot 4}=2^4\).
Try it 2: What is \((4^1)^3\)?
Hint: \((4^1)^3=4^{1\cdot 3}=4^3\).
Summary
Power of a power: \((a^m)^n=a^{mn}\).
Parentheses tell you what the exponent applies to.
Zero & Negative Exponents
Zero exponents and negative exponents
Learning goal: Use \(a^0=1\) and rewrite negative exponents as reciprocals.
Key idea
For any nonzero base \(a\): \[ a^0=1 \quad\text{and}\quad a^{-n}=\frac{1}{a^n}. \] Negative exponents do not mean "negative numbers" - they mean "reciprocal."
Notation: Modern exponent notation became standard in algebra as symbolic math developed in Europe; exponents made repeated multiplication compact and readable.
Big idea: The same exponent rules power advanced topics like exponential functions, logarithms, and scientific notation.
Everyday connection: Powers show up in unit conversions (\(m^2\), \(cm^3\)) and in technology (powers of 2).
Final recap
Meaning (for \(n\ge 1\)): \(a^n=\underbrace{a\cdot a\cdots a}_{n\text{ factors}}\) and \(a^1=a\).
Next step: Close this lesson and try your quiz again. If you miss a question, reopen the book and review the page that matches the exponent rule you need.