In standard notation, any number raised to the power of 0 is equal to 1. Therefore, 10 to the 0 power in standard notation is 1. This is because any non-zero number raised to the power of 0 is defined as 1 according to the fundamental properties of exponents.
Based on your abbreviation for mathematics, I guess you are American. American usage of Standard Notation is to mean ordinary numbers - ie a number written normally. It is the opposite of expanded notation whereby the number is written as the sum of its digits each multiplied by its place value column. For example 123.4 is standard notation; in expanded notation it would be written as 100 + 20 + 3 + 0.4 In the UK, Standard Notation is used to mean scientific notation (or standard index notation) which is a number with one non-zero digit before a decimal point multiplied by a power of 10. It is a way of writing ordinary numbers, especially very big or little ones. For example 123.4 is an ordinary number which is 1.234 × 10² in standard notation. By multiplying out the standard notation the ordinary number is retrieved: 1.234 × 10² = 1.234 × 100 = 123.4
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. Unless you are not in the USA, in which case Standard form (also known as "standard index form" or "scientific notation") requires a single non-zero digit before the decimal point and a multiplier of a power of 10 which gets the decimal point back to where it was in the original number. To calculated the power of the ten count how many digits the decimal point needs to move; if it needs to move to the left make it negative: 0.00105 = 1.05 × 10^-3
zero because.............3 times zero is ZERO
With the standard notation, If b2 < 4ac then the discriminant is negative If b2 = 4ac then the discriminant is zero If b2 > 4ac then the discriminant is positive
In standard notation, any number raised to the power of 0 is equal to 1. Therefore, 10 to the 0 power in standard notation is 1. This is because any non-zero number raised to the power of 0 is defined as 1 according to the fundamental properties of exponents.
9x100. Since anything to the zero power is 1, this becomes just 9.
this number is already a decimal if you wanted it in Scientific Notation it would be 5.300 times 10 to the zero power
1.77 x 100 is already in scientific notation. The same figure is 1.77 in standard notation.
2,501 in scientific notation would be 2.501 x 10^3 (two point five zero one times ten to the third power)
Based on your abbreviation for mathematics, I guess you are American. American usage of Standard Notation is to mean ordinary numbers - ie a number written normally. It is the opposite of expanded notation whereby the number is written as the sum of its digits each multiplied by its place value column. For example 123.4 is standard notation; in expanded notation it would be written as 100 + 20 + 3 + 0.4 In the UK, Standard Notation is used to mean scientific notation (or standard index notation) which is a number with one non-zero digit before a decimal point multiplied by a power of 10. It is a way of writing ordinary numbers, especially very big or little ones. For example 123.4 is an ordinary number which is 1.234 × 10² in standard notation. By multiplying out the standard notation the ordinary number is retrieved: 1.234 × 10² = 1.234 × 100 = 123.4
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. Unless you are not in the USA, in which case Standard form (also known as "standard index form" or "scientific notation") requires a single non-zero digit before the decimal point and a multiplier of a power of 10 which gets the decimal point back to where it was in the original number. To calculated the power of the ten count how many digits the decimal point needs to move; if it needs to move to the left make it negative: 0.00105 = 1.05 × 10^-3
2.80006 X 10*7 that is two point eight zero zero zero six times ten to the power of seven
8.65 means the same thing as 8.65 x 10^0 (ten to the zero power = 1) Standard notation uses one (non-zero) numeral to the left of the decimal point, and expresses the value based on a power of 10. e.g. 86.5 = 8.65 x 10^1 865 = 8.65 x 10^2
zero because.............3 times zero is ZERO
3.100
1.1 x 10^0 (That's ten to the zero power). Any nonzero real number, raised to the zero power equals 1.