Learning Objectives for This Deck
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
- Express very large and very small numbers in the form
, where and is an integer - Convert fluently between standard form and scientific notation for magnitudes from
to - Estimate real-world quantities by rounding to a single digit times an integer power of 10
Three Numbers That Are Hard to Read
How many zeros are in each number below?
- 93,000,000 — distance from Earth to Sun, in miles
- 0.000000001 — diameter of a molecule, in meters
- 7,900,000,000 — world population
Are you sure you counted correctly? Would you bet on it?
Scientific Notation: Structure and Definition
Form:
- Coefficient
: captures significant digits - Power of 10: captures the scale
Examples:
Coefficient and Exponent: Labeled Parts
- Coefficient
: must satisfy — exactly one non-zero digit before the decimal point - Exponent
: positive → large number ( )
- Exponent
: negative → small number ( )
Converting Large Numbers to Scientific Notation
Procedure: Move the decimal left until coefficient is between 1 and 10. Places moved = exponent.
7 places left; number is large → exponent is positive.
3 places left → exponent is 3.
Converting Small Numbers to Scientific Notation
Procedure: Move the decimal right until coefficient is between 1 and 10. Places moved = absolute value of exponent (negative).
4 places right; small number → exponent is negative.
9 places right → exponent is −9.
Converting Scientific Notation to Standard Form
Procedure: Positive exponent → move decimal right (large number). Negative exponent → move decimal left (small number).
Move decimal 5 places right.
Move decimal 3 places left.
Which Expression Is Proper Scientific Notation?
All three equal 320,000:
| Expression | Proper? |
|---|---|
| No — |
|
| Yes ✓ | |
| No — |
Decimal Direction Depends on the Exponent Sign
- Positive exponent → large number → decimal moves right to restore standard form
- Negative exponent → small number → decimal moves left to restore standard form
Chunk One Key Rules and Conversion Summary
Form:
Converting:
- Large number → decimal left → positive exponent
- Small number → decimal right → negative exponent
Watch out:
- Negative exponent → decimal moves left to restore
- Verify coefficient is between 1 and 10
From Exact Notation to Single-Digit Estimates
The standard requires: a single digit times an integer power of 10
- US population:
(exact scientific notation) - Single-digit estimate:
← what 8.EE.A.3 requires
Why? One significant figure enables mental math and magnitude comparison.
Three Steps for Estimating Any Quantity
Step 1: Write the number in scientific notation
Step 2: Round the coefficient to one digit
Step 3: Write the single-digit estimate
Examples: Estimating Large Real-World Quantities
| Quantity | Full notation | Estimate |
|---|---|---|
| World population | ||
| US national debt | ||
| Proxima Centauri distance |
Examples: Estimating Small Real-World Quantities
| Quantity | Full notation | Estimate |
|---|---|---|
| Human hair diameter | ||
| Mass of a proton |
When the Coefficient Rounds Up to Ten
Problem: mass of a bacterium ≈
Step 2: Round 9.5 to one digit → rounds to 10
But
Fix:
When rounding pushes the coefficient to 10, increase the exponent by 1.
Powers of Ten Reference Chart
Use this chart to check whether your estimates make sense.
Check In: Estimate This Earth-Mars Distance
The distance from Earth to Mars at its closest approach is about 55,000,000 km.
Express this as a single digit times a power of 10.
Work it out before advancing...
Answer:
Practice: Estimate These Real-World Quantities
Express as a single digit × power of 10:
- Speed of light: about 300 million m/s
- Visible light wavelength: 0.00000055 m
- National debt: 27 trillion dollars
Practice Answers: Estimation with Scientific Notation
- Speed of light:
m/s - Visible light:
m - National debt:
Problem 2: 5.5 rounds to 6. Problem 3: 2.7 rounds to 3 — no exponent adjustment needed.
Key Takeaways from Definition and Estimation
✓ Scientific notation:
✓ Positive exponent → large number; negative exponent → small number
✓ To estimate: convert → round coefficient to 1 digit → check coefficient < 10
Watch out: Negative exponent → small number → decimal moves LEFT to restore standard form
Watch out: After rounding, always verify
Next Lesson: Comparing Quantities with Scientific Notation
Lesson 2 preview:
- "How many times as much is A than B?" → divide, not subtract
- Connection to 8.EE.A.1: the quotient rule for exponents
Prerequisite: fluency with single-digit estimation from today's lesson