The number .00008 can be expressed in scientific notation as 8 x 10^-5. It represents a very small decimal value, equivalent to 8 ten-thousandths or 0.00008 units of whatever measurement is being considered. In percentage terms, it is equal to 0.008%.
no
To go from percent to decimal divide by 100, or move decimal two places to he left .008% = .00008
0.00008 Km corresponds to 8 cm. There are 1000 meters in a kilometer and 100 centimeters in a meter. 1000 x 100 = 100,000 8 / 100,000 = .00008.
Since 68 is a number and it is not the same as 800,000, there is not an answer to your question since no number is two numbers. Perhaps you meant, "What is the numeric representation of sixty eight and eight hundred thousandths?" Notice my addition of "ths" to the very end. If you are looking for a single number answer, the addition I made is required. Eight hundred thousandths is .00008, so the answer to my rephrased question is 68.00008. If I misunderstood your question, please rephrase.
mili .001 80 ppm (part per million) .00008 grams .00008 -> .08mg
no
To go from percent to decimal divide by 100, or move decimal two places to he left .008% = .00008
0.00008 Km corresponds to 8 cm. There are 1000 meters in a kilometer and 100 centimeters in a meter. 1000 x 100 = 100,000 8 / 100,000 = .00008.
A grain of rice weighs roughly 0.0725 ounces.
Since 68 is a number and it is not the same as 800,000, there is not an answer to your question since no number is two numbers. Perhaps you meant, "What is the numeric representation of sixty eight and eight hundred thousandths?" Notice my addition of "ths" to the very end. If you are looking for a single number answer, the addition I made is required. Eight hundred thousandths is .00008, so the answer to my rephrased question is 68.00008. If I misunderstood your question, please rephrase.
Oh, dude, writing eight thousandths is like super easy. You just start with the number 8 and then add three zeros after the decimal point, like 0.008. Boom, there you have it, eight thousandths. It's like basic math, you know?