Some numbers we use are simply too large to efficiently write out. For example, the mass of the Earth is 5,980,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms. This is a really large number, and it may be difficult to keep track of all of the zeros.

Let’s learn a strategy that can help in situations like this.

Look at the following three examples:

30 = 3 x 10

600 = 6 x 100

800,000 = 8 x 100,000

Use what you observed to complete the two number sentences below.

20,000,000 = 2 x ?

10,000,000

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3,000 = 3 x ?

1,000

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What are we doing in each of these examples?

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We are writing bigger numbers as a small number times a power of 10. Close Pop Up

Video segment. Assistance may be required. Watch the following video as it applies this fact and what we learned in section 1 to the number 7,560,000,000.

Scientific notation writes very large numbers as a coefficient times 10 raised to an exponent:

Coefficient x 10exponent

When writing a number in scientific notation the coefficient must have a value that is greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10.

In the example in the video, what was the coefficient?

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7.56 Close Pop Up

What was the exponent?

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9 Close Pop Up

Interactive exercise. Assistance may be required.

What exponent should we use to write the power of 10 for the mass of the earth?

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24 Close Pop Up

What is the mass of the earth written in scientific notation?

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5.98 x 1024 kilograms Close Pop Up

How many places was the decimal point moved to convert to scientific notation?

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The decimal was moved 24 spaces to the left. Close Pop Up

Sometimes we are faced with numbers that are very large, but other times, we must work with numbers that are very small. For example, the mass of a dust particle is 0.000000000753 kilograms.

If the mass a dust particle is written in scientific notation, what will be the coefficient?

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The coefficient should be 7.53. Close Pop Up

What is the first digit in the coefficient?

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7 Close Pop Up

In which decimal place is that number?

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The 7 is in the 10th decimal place. Close Pop Up

From the rule that you generated in section 2 of this resource, how would you write 10 raised to a power so that it would equal a decimal that has a 1 in the 10th decimal place?

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10-10 Close Pop Up

How would you write the mass of a dust particle in scientific notation?

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7.53 x 10-10 kilograms. Close Pop Up

How many places, and in what direction, was the decimal point moved to convert 0.000000000753 kilograms.to scientific notation?

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The decimal was moved 10 places to the right. Close Pop Up

Important note:

The negative sign means that this is a decimal between 0 and 1, it does not make the number itself negative. To write a negative number in scientific notation, you need to make the coefficient negative.