10
1,000,000
1,000
10000
Yes.
I think you're asking about powers of ten, not multiples of ten. In whole numbers, the place values as they increase from right to left are: ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, ten-thousands, hundred thousands, millions, ten-millions, hundred millions, billions, ten-billions, hundred billions, trillions... Each place value increases by another power of ten: Place Value Power of ten ones 10 to the zero power tens 10 to the first power hundreds 10 to the 2nd power (10 squared) thousands 10 to the 3rd power (10 cubed) ten-thousands 10 to the 4th power
10000
1,000,000
1,000
Yes.
I think you're asking about powers of ten, not multiples of ten. In whole numbers, the place values as they increase from right to left are: ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, ten-thousands, hundred thousands, millions, ten-millions, hundred millions, billions, ten-billions, hundred billions, trillions... Each place value increases by another power of ten: Place Value Power of ten ones 10 to the zero power tens 10 to the first power hundreds 10 to the 2nd power (10 squared) thousands 10 to the 3rd power (10 cubed) ten-thousands 10 to the 4th power
5.3 times ten to the negative first power is 0.53
570,000,000
Its value is 0, but its place value is ten thousands.
It is ten billion or 10,000,000,000
To determine if the value of the first 4 (which is 4,000) is ten times as great as the value of the second 4 (which is 4043), we compare the two. Ten times the value of the second 4 would be 10 x 4043 = 40,430. Since 4,000 is not equal to 40,430, the first 4 is not ten times as great as the second 4.
Ten million.
1