I referred earlier to a negative superscript used with the conventional symbol for meter. In the article the value was written asThe impedance coupled by wires is very high so to get 5 mA m-2 which means per meter squared, you would need 10kV of audio if the coupling reactance was 2 kOhm
More likely bacteria (Septic arthritis, likely caused by an organism of the Enterobacteriaceae family)
or posture or age related.
Frequent stretch is critical to keeping plasma and blood circulation from causing inflamation.
10mA mˉ². My guess is that the exponent minus 2 would be handled the same as it would in the expression 10ˉ² which equals 0.1. My logic says 2m² equals 2 square meters. The value of m° equals 0. The value of m¹ equals 1 meter. The value of m² is one square meter. The value of m³ is one cubic meter. Inversely mˉ¹ equals a square decimeter. The value of mˉ² equals a square centimeter, and so on. I might be mistaken or mˉ² might be slang. The exponents could go on infinitely in the negative direction but I'm am not visualizing a value for m exponent 4. Apparently unicode doesn't either and exponents cease above 3. Let me know if you are certain on this matter. Thanks. Regardless of area represented I do not plan to use it to support my notion of RF burns.