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How does scientific notation use exponents and base 10? - Answers
I understand Scientific Notation as for example 1.3E2, which = 130 as the 2 is the exponent of the 10 by which the 1.3 is multiplied. My calculator & other sources give alternatively, Engineering Notation, in which the same would be 1.3 X 102 Same number, 130. Yet I've seen the latter also described as "Scientific". The choice is yours. I find E.N. slightly clearer for index-arithmetic but that's a matter of practice. Cor! All this struggling to write indices in a text message, and I've just spotted that Answers gives super- and sub- script keys in its tool-bar!
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How does scientific notation use exponents and base 10? - Answers
I understand Scientific Notation as for example 1.3E2, which = 130 as the 2 is the exponent of the 10 by which the 1.3 is multiplied. My calculator & other sources give alternatively, Engineering Notation, in which the same would be 1.3 X 102 Same number, 130. Yet I've seen the latter also described as "Scientific". The choice is yours. I find E.N. slightly clearer for index-arithmetic but that's a matter of practice. Cor! All this struggling to write indices in a text message, and I've just spotted that Answers gives super- and sub- script keys in its tool-bar!
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How does scientific notation use exponents and base 10? - Answers
I understand Scientific Notation as for example 1.3E2, which = 130 as the 2 is the exponent of the 10 by which the 1.3 is multiplied. My calculator & other sources give alternatively, Engineering Notation, in which the same would be 1.3 X 102 Same number, 130. Yet I've seen the latter also described as "Scientific". The choice is yours. I find E.N. slightly clearer for index-arithmetic but that's a matter of practice. Cor! All this struggling to write indices in a text message, and I've just spotted that Answers gives super- and sub- script keys in its tool-bar!
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