A null hypothesis is written in notation by using a a statement that is the opposite of what is intended to be found, for example the research will derive answers or needed statements that is different from what is intended.
Standard form or scientific notation is used to write a very large or very small number.
Most people prefer to write numbers using digits since this is far shorter than writing out the relevant words.
31 = 3 + 33 + (3/3).
401
Expanded Notation of 80 = (8 x 101) + (0 x 100).
Expanded Notation of 2784 = (2 x 103) + (7 x 102) + (8 x 101) + (4 x 100).
Expanded Notation of 525 = (5 x 102) + (2 x 101) + (5 x 100).
Decimal notation is.
2^7
(4 * 103) + (7 * 102) + (6 * 101) + (8 * 100).
Expanded Notation of 267,853 = (2 x 105) + (6 x 104) + (7 x 103) + (8 x 102) + (5 x 101) + (3 x 100).
Expanded notation is a way of writing a number as the sum of its individual place values. For example, the number 3,456 in expanded notation would be written as 3 x 1000 + 4 x 100 + 5 x 10 + 6 x 1.
5 x 10^3 + 2 x 10^2 + 8 x 10^1
Expanded Notation written using the powers of 10 This is an extension of writing the equation in expanded notation! Therefore I will use the information from that to explain; First I'll do out a table showing powers 10^2 = 100 10 to the power of 2 is One Hundred (2 zero's-after the 1) So hopefully you see the pattern in the above table!
1,494 = (1 x 103) + (4 x 102) + (9 x 101) + (4 x 100)
2.5 x 105 = 250,000