9514 1404 393
Answer:
see attached
Explanation:
There are several ways you can go about this. The most straight-forward (and time-consuming) is to use a calculator to calculate the value for each cell of the table.
If you realize that the first row will be the base of the exponential, then you can finish filling that easily. The first row is completed by ...
4^1 = 4, 5^1 = 5.
Each row below that is the immediately preceding row multiplied by the number in the first row. For example, to finish the second column, we have ...
2^4 = 2·8 = 16
2^5 = 2·16 = 32
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When calculations are easily defined and repetitive, I like to use a spreadsheet to do them. It avoids errors, and (to me) is less tedious than repeating the same calculation over and over. The first row of this spreadsheet is sequential numbers, as described above. The remaining cells raise the first row value to the left column power.