We call this form "scientific notation".
(4.1)(10^2) is scientific notation for the number 410.
There are different conventions for writing scientific notation, yet in beginning classes a multiplication sign is most commonly used.
(NOTE: I'm renaming your exponent symbol from x to k, since x looks too much like ×)
n × 10^k
where n is some number between 1 and 10 (n can actually equal 1; otherwise, it must be less than 10) and the exponent k is the number of positions that the decimal point must shift.
410 = 4.1 × 10^2
Here, k = 2, so we shift the decimal point two positions -- from 4.1 to 410.
As for writing the number 5^4 in scientific notation, start by calculating the value of 5^4.
Then, shift the decimal point k places to get your n between 1 and 10.
EG:
Write 3^7 in scientific notation
3^7 = 2187
To get a number between 1 and 10, we must shift the decimal point three places.
So, k = 3 and n = 2.187
In scientific notation, 3^7 is written as 2.187 × 10^3
The usefulness of scientific notation is realized when writing very big (or very small) numbers. For example, the distance that light travels in one year is about 5,870,000,000,000 meters. Who wants to write all of those zeros again and again?
Scientific notation makes this big number more compact:
5.87 × 10^12 meters