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Scientific Notation: Representing Large and Small Numbers, Study Guides, Projects, Research of Science education

CalculusStatisticsÁlgebra

Scientific notation, a mathematical method used to represent very large and very small numbers. It provides a table of powers of ten, steps to convert numbers to scientific notation, and examples. Students can use this document as a cheat sheet for scientific notation conversions.

What you will learn

  • How do you convert a number to scientific notation?
  • How do you convert a number written in scientific notation back to standard form?
  • What is the difference between writing a number in scientific notation with a positive exponent and a negative exponent?

Typology: Study Guides, Projects, Research

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/12/2022

salujaa
salujaa 🇺🇸

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Download Scientific Notation: Representing Large and Small Numbers and more Study Guides, Projects, Research Science education in PDF only on Docsity! Scientific Notation What is it? Scientific notation is used to represent very large and very small numbers. In scientific notation, a number is written as a number between 1 and 10 multiplied by a power of 10. Here is a table of the powers of 10 to help you see how to select your exponent for writing a number in scientific notation. Powers of Ten 10 1 = 10 10 6 = 1,000,000 100 = 1 10-5 = 0.00001 10 2 = 100 10 7 = 10,000,000 10-1 = 0.1 10-6 = 0.000001 10 3 = 1,000 10 8 = 100,000,000 10-2 = 0.01 10-7 = 0.0000001 10 4 = 10,000 10 9 = 1,000,000,000 10-3 = 0.001 10-8 = 0.00000001 10 5 = 100,000 10 10 = 10,000,000,000 10-4 = 0.0001 10-9 = 0.000000001 How to do it (Part 1). Follow these steps to change a number from standard form to scientific notation. For a large number. Step 1: Move the decimal point to the left until you have a number greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10. Step 2: Count the number of decimal places you moved the decimal point to the left and use that number as the positive power of 10. Step 3: Multiply the decimal (in Step 1) by the power of 10 (in Step 2). For a small number. Step 1: Move the decimal point to the right until you have a number greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10. Step 2: Count the number of decimal places you moved the decimal point to the right and use that number as the negative power of 10. Step 3: Multiply the decimal (in Step 1) by the power of 10 (in Step 2). Examples Write 782,000 in scientific notation. Move the decimal point 5 places to the left. 7.82000 Since the decimal point is moved 5 places to the left, multiply by 105. 7.82 x 105 So, 782,000 = 7.82 x 105 Write 0.0000006534 in scientific notation. Move the decimal point 7 places to the right. 6.534 Since the decimal point is moved 7 places to the right, multiply by 10-7. 6.534 x 10-7 So, 0.0000006534 = 6.534 x 10-7 How to do it (Part 2). To change a number written in scientific notation with a positive power of 10 to standard form, move the decimal point to the right. To change a number written in scientific notation with a negative power of 10 to standard form, move the decimal point to the left. The exponent tells you the number of places to move the decimal point. Remember to add zeros as placeholders when necessary. Scientific Notation Cheat Sheet Take the number and rewrite it as a decimal that is between 1 and 10. Multiply the decimal times 10 to the number of places you moved the decimal point. If decimal number is smaller than the original number, use a positive exponent. If the decimal is bigger, use a negative exponent. If you are rewriting a number in scientific notation back to standard form, move the decimal place the number of places the exponent is. Only add zeros if you are missing numbers to move the decimal past. If the scientific notation number has a negative exponent, the new number will be smaller than the decimal as you move the decimal to the left. If the scientific notation number has a positive exponent, the new number will be bigger than the decimal as you move the decimal to the right.
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