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Catalyst HOMEWORK OUT, PLEASE!  In complete sentences, describe the pattern you see in the first 4. After, fill in the 5 th and 6 th answers. 1) 3,450,000.0.

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Presentation on theme: "Catalyst HOMEWORK OUT, PLEASE!  In complete sentences, describe the pattern you see in the first 4. After, fill in the 5 th and 6 th answers. 1) 3,450,000.0."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Catalyst HOMEWORK OUT, PLEASE!  In complete sentences, describe the pattern you see in the first 4. After, fill in the 5 th and 6 th answers. 1) 3,450,000.0 = 3.45 x 10 6 2) 1,240,000,000.0 = 1.24 x 10 9 3) 0.00000837 = 8.37 x 10 -6 4) 8370000.0 = 8.37 x 10 6 5) 0.000072 = _______________________ 6) 273000.0 = _______________________

3 Today’s Agenda  Catalyst  Go over yesterday’s Exit Question/HW  Scientific Notation Practice  Intro to Dimensional Analysis  Practice!  Exit Question SCIENTIFIC NOTATION HW! QUIZ TOMORROW! UNIT TEST ON TUESDAY!

4 Exit Question Describe the accuracy (A) and precision (P) of 1 & 2. What prefix/unit would you use to measure the volume of cold drink in a can? What prefix/unit would you use to measure the length of your pinky?

5 Accuracy and Precision  William measures the mass of five different blocks on a triple-beam balance. His results are in the table to the right.  Are his measurements precise?  (Are they close to one another?)  Are his measurements accurate?  (Are they close to the true values?) Block Actual Mass of Block (g) Measured Mass of Block (g) 15649 26750 38953 410264 54951

6 HW 2.What is conversion between centimeters and meters?  1 meter = 100 centimeters 3.What is the conversion between milliliters and liters?  1 liter = 1000 milliliters 4.What is the conversion between grams and dekagrams?  10 dekagram = 1 gram 5.What is the conversion between decigrams and grams?  1 gram = 10 decigrams 6.What is the conversion between nanograms and grams?  1,000,000,000 nanograms = 1 gram 7.What is the conversion between liters and gigaliters?  1,000,000,000 Liters = 1 gigaliter 8.What is the conversion between meters and hectometers?  100 hectometers = 1 meter 9.What is the conversion between centigrams and grams?  100 centigrams = 1 gram 10.What is the conversion between megaliters and liters?  1,000,000 liters = 1 megaliter

7 The Power of Pesewas  1 Pesewa – Raffle Ticket (Put your name on the back and place it in your class’s jar)  5 Pesewas – Point on a test  10 Pesewas – College Pencil  15 Pesewas – Homework Pass  75 Pesewas – Lunch with Ms. Sanacore (She buys it, too!)  400 Pesewas – Pie Ms. Sanacore in the face

8 Today’s Objectives  SWBAT write numbers like a scientist/G.  SWBAT convert units like it’s hot…because that’s what Gs do.

9 Problem  When scientists are talking about light wavelengths, they are usually discussing nanometers, which is 10 -9 meters or 0.00000001 meters.  When scientists are talking about distances in space, they are usually discussing astronomical units (AU). 1 AU is 93,000,000 miles.

10 Problem  I don’t know about you, but I ain’t about to write all them zeros.  If only there was a way to fix this… SCIENTIFIC NOTATION!!!!

11 Notes – Scientific Notation Key Point #1 : Scientific notation is a way of abbreviating very large or very small numbers. 3.03 x 10 6 3 Parts! NumberPower of 10 Exponent

12 Scientific Notation Key Point #2: A number in correct scientific notation has only one non-zero number to the left of the decimal. 3.03 x 10 6

13 How to write numbers in scientific notation Move it to the left or move it to the right Add your exponent Then it’s aaaaaalright!

14 Big Numbers  Scientific Notation Let’s get rid of them zeroes at the end!  To do this, move the decimal point to the LEFT (to the left) 3 2 4 0 0 0 0 0.

15 Big Numbers  Scientific Notation How many times do we move the decimal to the LEFT (to the left)? 3 2 4 0 0 0 0 0.

16 Big Numbers  Scientific Notation …the decimal moves SEVEN times to the LEFT. 3.2 4 0 0 0 0 0

17 Big Numbers  Scientific Notation So, how do we use that number 7??? 3.2 4 0 0 0 0 0x 10 7

18 Big Numbers  Scientific Notation How many times do we move the decimal to the LEFT (to the left)? 3 2 4 0 0 0 0 0.

19 Small Numbers  Scientific Notation Let’s get rid of them zeroes at the front!  To do this, move the decimal point to the RIGHT (to the right) 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6.

20 Small Numbers  Scientific Notation How many times did we move the decimal to the RIGHT (to the right)? 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6.

21 Small Numbers  Scientific Notation …the decimal moves SIX times to the RIGHT (to the right). 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6.

22 Small Numbers  Scientific Notation So how do we use that number 6???.0 0 0 2 6x 10 -6

23 Positive and Negative Exponents  Key Point #3: If the number is BIG then the exponent is POSITIVE; if the number is small then the exponent is NEGATIVE.

24 Positive Exponent 5 6 x 10 3 2. Every time you move the decimal to the RIGHT, exponent DECREASES by 1.

25 Positive Exponent 5 6 x 10 2. 1 0

26 Positive Exponent 5 6 x 10 1 0. 0 0 Final answer: 5600

27 Negative Exponent 3 8. 0 x 10 Final answer: 0.38 Every time you move the decimal to the LEFT, exponent INCREASES by 1.

28 Scientific Notation 2250000

29 Scientific Notation 2.250000 2.25 x 10 6

30 Scientific Notation 10 300 000 000

31 Scientific Notation 1.0300000000 1.03 x 10 10

32 Scientific Notation 0.000055

33 Scientific Notation 00005.5 5.5 x 10 -5

34 Scientific Notation 9870000 0.00000987

35 Scientific Notation 98700009.87 x 10 6 0.000009879.87 x 10 -6

36 Scientific Notation 8.1 x 10 3 9.4 x 10 -2

37 Scientific Notation 8.1 x 10 3 8100 9.4 x 10 -2 0.094

38 CONVERSIONS  GET READY FOR AWESOME!

39 Convert it like it’s hot  Key Point #1: A conversion factor shows the same value with two different units.  YOU ALREADY KNOW THIS STUFF!  Examples: 10 dimes= 1 dollar 20 nickels= 1 dollar 4 quarters= 1 dollar

40 Dimensional Analysis  Key Point #2: Dimensional analysis is a tool used to convert from one unit to another.

41 Working on the Railroad  Step 1:  What to what?  Step 2:  Write conversion factor(s)  Step 3:  Train tracks

42 Practice! One-step problems.  How many meters are in 10 centimeters?  How many centimeters are in 327 meters?

43 Practice! On your own!  The distance from New Orleans to Miami is 1387 kilometers (862 miles). Convert 1387 kilometers to meters!

44 Always remember…  Key Point #3: In two step problems, always convert to the unit without a prefix first.  Mass: grams  Distance: meters  Volume: liters

45 Practice…  Chris Paul has a mass of 79.4 kg, convert this to mg.  *Bonus: If a standard basketball has a mass of 620, 000 mg, how many basketballs would equal the mass of Chris Paul?

46 Practice  There are 1135 decaliters (daL) in a pool. Convert to centiliters (cL).  10 L = 1 daL  100 cL = 1 L

47 Practice!  The average human eye blink is 300 milliseconds. Convert this to hectoseconds.

48 Independent Practice DO IT TO IT! We CAN; therefore, we WILL. “Practice as if you are the worst. Perform as if you are the best.” 1. What to what? 2. Conversion Factors 3. Train Tracks! Choo choo!

49 Exit Question  In July 2008, it was estimated that the world’s population is about 6,707,000,000. The United States’ population was estimated to be 304,060,000. The coldest temperature ever created by man is 0.000000005°K. Write these 3 numbers in scientific notation.


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