Dividing Scientific Notation | MathHelp.com - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Dividing Scientific Notation | MathHelp.com - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Dividing Scientific Notation | MathHelp.com - By MathHelp.com



Transcript
00:0-1 to divide numbers that are written in scientific notation Such
00:04 as 6.5 times 10 cubed , divided by 9.8 times
00:10 10 to the 9th . We first divide the decimals
00:14 In this case 6.5 divided by 9.8 To get 0.663265306
00:25 . And let's go ahead and round this decimal to
00:28 the nearest 100th . Since the three to the right
00:31 of the rounding place is less than five . We
00:34 round down So we have 0.66 . Next we divide
00:41 the powers of 10 . In this case 10 cubed
00:45 divided by 10 to the 9th . And since we're
00:48 dividing two powers that have like bases , we subtract
00:52 the exponents and leave the base the same To get
00:56 10 to the 3 -9 or 10 to the -6
01:01 . So we have 0.66 times 10 to the -6
01:07 . Finally were asked to write our answer in scientific
01:11 notation , Notice that our decimal 0.66 is not between
01:17 one and 10 . So our number is not in
01:21 scientific notation . In this situation we multiply 0.66 by
01:28 10 which moves the decimal .1 place to the right
01:33 And we have 6.6 . Now our decimal is between
01:38 one and 10 . However , if we multiply the
01:42 decimal by 10 Then we must divide the power of
01:46 10 by 10 in order to balance things out .
01:50 So we have 10 to the negative six divided by
01:53 10 or 10 to the negative six divided by 10
01:57 to the first , Which means that we subtract the
02:00 exponents negative 6 -1 To get -7 . So we
02:06 have 6.6 times 10 to the negative 7th , which
02:10 is our final answer written in scientific notation .
Summarizer

DESCRIPTION:

To multiply numbers that are in written in scientific notation, such as 1.4 x 10 to the -2nd times 5.3 times 10 to the 6th, we first multiply the decimals, in this case 1.4 times 5.3, to get 7.42. Next, we multiply the powers of 10, in this case 10 to the -2nd times 10 to the 6th. Notice that we’re multiplying two powers that have like bases, so we add the exponents and leave the base the same, to get 10 to the -2 + 6, or 10 to the 4th. So we have 7.42 times 10 to the 4th. Finally, we’re asked to write our answer in scientific notation. Notice, however, that 7.42 times 10 to the -4th is already written in scientific notation, because we have a decimal between 1 and 10 that is multiplied by a power of 10. So we have our answer.

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