In standard form it is 4.86*104. Standard form and scientific form are the same.
No.
Standard form is the same as scientific notation and it is: 9.6*10^-2
A numeric coefficient is simply a number that is being multiplied by something else. For example, in the term: 3a the number 3 is a numeric coefficient of the term "a". This is just a short way of expressing multiplication. That term means the same thing as: 3 × a
No. In the index form a number is expressed as a multiple of its prime factors whereas in the standard form it is expressed as a number between in the range [1, 10) multiplied by an integer power of 10. So, for example, 1728 in index form = 26*33 1728 in standard form = 1.728*103 The index form can only be used for integers.
Do nothing! Standard form and scientific notation are the same.
It is: 56,000 = 5.6*104 in standard form which is the same as scientific notation
Because the basis for expansion are the powers of ten - exactly the same as in the standard form.
10 ones in standard form is the same as 10 x 1 which is 10
It is the same as in the question
The way you wrote it is the standard notation. Standard notation means to write the number in its standard form. So, a number such as 150 is simply written as 150 in standard notation. The same applies to decimals.
It means that the left hand side value is same as the right hand side value, i.e, the numeric or algebraic value is the same, no matter in what form it is (if its algebraic. eg:- numeric:2+3=6-1 algebraic:9x+5y=15