How do you write 13,560,000 in scientific notation?

1 Answer
Feb 27, 2016

" "color(blue)(1.356xx10^7)

Explanation:

color(blue)("How it works")

Scientific notation format is that you have a single, non zero digit to the left of a decimal point and everything else to the right of it.

The problem in doing this is that you changed the value. So you have to apply a correction that if it were to be implemented would return the number back to its original format.
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Example: Consider the value of 23

To convert this into the required format you would divide it by 10

so that 23 -: 10 = 2.3

the problem is that 2.3!=23

However: 2.3xx10 does
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color(brown)("So what has happened?")

We have done two thing.

color(brown)("Step 1")

We multiplied 23 by 1 but 1 was in the form of 10/10

" "color(brown)( 23xx10/10" " = " "23/10xx10)
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color(brown)("Step 2")

We applied the division but leave the other ten in place:

" "color(brown)( 2.3 xx 10)
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
color(blue)("Solving your question")

Given:" " 13560000.0

Keeping the decimal place still we have to slide the digits to the right for 7 digits to get: 1.356

So we have
" "13560000.0xx10^7/10^7

" "13560000.0/10^7xx10^7

" "color(blue)(1.356xx10^7)