Superscript Symbols to Copy and Paste

Explore our comprehensive collection of superscript symbols including numbers, letters, mathematical notation, and special characters. Perfect for mathematics, scientific notation, equations, footnotes, citations, and academic writing. Simply click any symbol to copy it to your clipboard!

Superscript Numbers

¹
²
³
°

Superscript Letters (Lowercase)

ʰ
ʲ
ˡ

Superscript Letters (Lowercase Continued)

ʳ
ˢ
ʷ
ˣ
ʸ

Superscript Letters (Uppercase)

Superscript Letters (Uppercase Continued)

Q
ᴿ
ˢ
ˣ
ʸ
ᴬᴱ
ᴼᴱ
ɪ

Mathematical Superscripts

xⁿ
10ⁿ
aᵇ
2ⁿ
π²
θⁿ
α²
β³
γⁿ
δ²
Σⁿ
∫ⁿ

Scientific Notation

10¹
10²
10³
10⁴
10⁵
10⁶
10⁷
10⁸
10⁹
10⁻¹
10⁻²
10⁻³
km²
cm³

Chemistry & Physics

H⁺
OH⁻
CO²
H²O
H²SO⁴
NH³
CH⁴
Ca²⁺
Cl⁻
Na⁺
K⁺
E=mc²
F=ma
A=πr²
V=⁴⁄₃πr³
h⁺

Ordinal Numbers

1ˢᵗ
2ⁿᵈ
3ʳᵈ
4ᵗʰ
5ᵗʰ
6ᵗʰ
7ᵗʰ
8ᵗʰ
9ᵗʰ
10ᵗʰ
11ᵗʰ
12ᵗʰ
20ᵗʰ
21ˢᵗ
100ᵗʰ
nᵗʰ

Special Characters & Punctuation

*
§
©
®
°
¹
²
³

About Superscript Symbols

Superscript symbols are characters positioned above the normal text baseline, commonly used in mathematics, science, academic writing, and typography. These raised characters serve various purposes including representing exponents, powers, ordinal numbers, footnote markers, and chemical formulas.

In mathematics and science, superscripts are essential for expressing powers (x²), scientific notation (10⁶), chemical formulas (H₂O), and mathematical operations. They're also widely used in academic writing for footnotes, citations, and references, making them indispensable tools for scholarly communication.

Whether you're writing mathematical equations, scientific papers, creating footnotes, or working with chemical formulas, our comprehensive collection of superscript symbols provides easy access to all the characters you need for professional and accurate notation across various fields of study and communication.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are superscript symbols used for?

Superscript symbols are used for mathematical exponents (x²), scientific notation (10⁶), chemical formulas (CO₂), footnotes, citations, ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd), and academic references in professional writing.

How do I copy these superscript symbols?

Simply click on any symbol to add it to the text area above. You can then copy all symbols at once using the COPY button, or select and copy individual symbols as needed.

Can I use these in Microsoft Word or Google Docs?

Yes! These Unicode superscript symbols work in most text editors, word processors, and online platforms including Microsoft Word, Google Docs, PowerPoint, and web browsers.

What's the difference between ² and ^2?

² is a true Unicode superscript character that appears raised above the baseline, while ^2 uses the caret symbol to indicate an exponent. The Unicode version (²) looks more professional and is preferred in formal documents.

Are these symbols compatible with all devices?

These Unicode superscript symbols are widely supported across modern devices, operating systems, and applications. They work on Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, and in web browsers.