How do you write 0.25 million in scientific notation?

2 Answers
Jul 5, 2016

0.25 million=2.5xx10^5.

Explanation:

In scientific notation, we write a number so that it has single digit to the left of decimal sign and is multiplied by an integer power of 10.

Note that moving decimal p digits to right is equivalent to multiplying by 10^p and moving decimal q digits to left is equivalent to dividing by 10^q.

Hence, we should either divide the number by 10^p i.e. multiply by 10^(-p) (if moving decimal to right) or multiply the number by 10^q (if moving decimal to left).

In other words, it is written as axx10^n, where 1<=a<10 and n is an integer.

Now 0,25 million is equivalent to 0.25xx10^6. However, to write in scientific notation, we need to have first digit to the left of decimal and hence we should move the decimal point one point to right, which literally means multiplying by 10 and also divide by 10, which will reduce the power of 10 to 5.

Hence in scientific notation 0.25 million=2.5xx10^5.

Jul 6, 2016

2.5xx10^5

Explanation:

A million is 10^6 ->1000,000

So we have 0.25 of that amount which is written 0.25xx10^6

But scientific notation is such that we have just 1 non zero digit to the left of a decimal point and everything else to the right of it.

So the objective is to and up with 0.25 becoming 2.5

But this is a different value. So we include a correction without actually a applying it

0.25 = 2.5xx1/10

So instead of writing 0.25xx10^6 we write:

2.5xx1/10xx10^6

This is the same as

2.5xx(10^6)/10" "->" "2.5xx10^5