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Scientific Notation -Scientists often work with very large or very small numbers -For example light travels at 300,000,000 meters per second -On the other.

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Presentation on theme: "Scientific Notation -Scientists often work with very large or very small numbers -For example light travels at 300,000,000 meters per second -On the other."— Presentation transcript:

1 Scientific Notation -Scientists often work with very large or very small numbers -For example light travels at 300,000,000 meters per second -On the other hand a snail on average travels about 0.00086 meter per second Scientific Notation is a way of expressing a number between 1 and 10 and a power of 10!!!

2 Scientific Notation Example: 300,000,000 is written in scientific notation as 3.0 X 10 The exponent 8 tells you that the decimal point is really 8 places to the right of the # 3 For numbers less than one they will have a negative exponent Example: 0.00086 is written as 8.6 X 10 The negative 4 exponent tells you how many places to the left 8.6

3 Scientific Notation When multiplying numbers in scientific notation, you multiply the numbers that appear before the multiplication signs and then ADD the exponents Example: To calculate how far light travels in 500 seconds, you multiply the speed of light by the number of seconds -Look at dry erase board!!!

4 Example ( 3.0 X 10 m/s) X (5.0 x 10 s) = 15 x 10 m = 1.5 x 10 m

5 Scientific Notation When dividing numbers written in scientific notation, you divide the numbers before the exponential terms and subtract the exponents Example: To calculate how long it takes for light from the sun to reach Earth, you would perform division -Look at dry erase board

6 Metric Prefixes It indicates how many times a unit should be multiplied or divided by 10 Figure 15 on page 17 -Example: You can write 0.009 second as 9 milliseconds or 9 ms 9 ms = 9/1000 seconds = 0.009 seconds

7 Metric Prefixes Conversion factor -It is a ratio of equivalent measurements that is used to convert a quantity expressed in one unit to another unit

8 Limits of Measurement Precision -Is a gauge of how exact a measurement is -Example: -Analog clock versus digital clock -Digital clock has more significant figures -Significant figure is all the digits that are known in a measurement, plus the last digit that is estimated

9 Limits of Measurement Accuracy -Is the closeness of a measurement to the actual value of what is being measured -Example: - Suppose a digital clock is running 15 minutes slow, although the clock would remain precise to the nearest second, the time displayed would still be wrong

10 Measuring Temperature Thermometer is a instrument that measures temperature, or how hot an object is Two main temperature scales -Farenheight and Celsius °F to °C, Deduct 32, then multiply by 5, then divide by 9 °C to °F, Multiply by 9, then divide by 5, then add 32

11 Measuring Temperature The SI unit for temperature is Kelvin (K) 0 k or 0 Kelvin refers to the lowest temperature that can be reached -In Celsius it is -273.15 °C -To convert between Kelvins and degrees Celsius, use the following formula K = °C + 273


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