precison.
When the value that you are representing in scientific notation is less than 1, or greater than or equal to 10.
If the exponent is not negative, then a number written in scientific notation is greater than or equal to 1.
n>1
2.52*10^5 miles. Though miles is not a scientific unit of measurement.
Scientific notation means the number is represented as being greater or equal to one but less than 10. So for 103: 103 = 10.3 x 10 [still greater than 1 but not less than 10] = 1.03 x 102 [greater than or equal to one? Check. Less than 10? Check] So, 103 in scientific notation is: 1.03 x 102
When the value that you are representing in scientific notation is less than 1, or greater than or equal to 10.
If the exponent is not negative, then a number written in scientific notation is greater than or equal to 1.
n>1
I havent got a clue.
2.52*10^5 miles. Though miles is not a scientific unit of measurement.
Scientific notation means the number is represented as being greater or equal to one but less than 10. So for 103: 103 = 10.3 x 10 [still greater than 1 but not less than 10] = 1.03 x 102 [greater than or equal to one? Check. Less than 10? Check] So, 103 in scientific notation is: 1.03 x 102
It is 9.99*103 times greater. (It is 103 times as great.)
You can apply scientific notation to any number. However, it usually makes sense to do so if the number is greater than at least one million or smaller than a millionth.
No, the number is not written in scientific notation. In scientific notation, the coefficient should be greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10. Therefore, 0.15 x 10^4 would be written as 1.5 x 10^3 in scientific notation.
It could be 6.0*10^7 as in scientific notation
No. For it to be written in true scientific notation, the matissa must be greater than of equal to 1 (it is) and less than 10 (it isn't). The correct form would be 4.56*104
its absolute value is greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10