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Scientific notation is commonly used in chemistry and physics to represent very large or very small numbers. Changing numbers into and out of scientific notation isn't as hard as it looks. Just follow these steps to find out how to do it.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Converting Numbers Into Scientific Notation

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  1. You'll need to start with a very small or a very large number if you want to successfully convert it into scientific notation. For example, 10,090,250,000,000 is very large; 0.00004205 is very small.[1]
  2. This is the first step to beginning to convert the number into scientific notation. If you're working with the number 0.00004205, just write an "x" over the decimal point.[2]
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  3. In this case, the first non-zero number is 4, so place the decimal point after the 4 so that the new number reads 000004.205.[3]
    • This works for large numbers, too. For example, 10,090,250,000,000 would become 1.0090250000000.
  4. Insignificant digits are any zeros that are not in between other, non-zero digits.[4]
    • For example, in the number 1.0090250000000, the zeroes at the end are insignificant, but the zeros between the 1 and then 9, and between the 9 and the 2, are significant. Rewrite this number as 1.009025.
    • In the number 000004.205, the leading zeros are insignificant. Rewrite this number as 4.205.
  5. Just write 4.205 x 10 for now.
  6. In the case of 0.00004205 to 4.205, you moved the decimal point over 5 times. In the case of 10,090,250,000,000 to 1.0090250000000, you moved the decimal point 13 times.[5]
  7. For 1.0090250000000, write x 1013. For 4.25, write x 105.[6]
  8. If your original number was very large, the exponent should be positive. If your original number was very small, the exponent should be negative.[7]
    • For example: the very large number 10,090,250,000,000 becomes 1.009025 x 10 13 while the very small number 0.00004205 becomes 4.205 x 10-5.
  9. This depends on how certain you need to be in your answer. For example, 1.009025 x 1013 might be better off as 1.009 x 1013 or even as 1.01 x 1013, depending on how accurate you need to be.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Converting Numbers from Scientific Notation

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  1. If the exponent on the "x 10" part of the number is positive, then you will be moving the decimal places to the right; if the exponent is negative, you will be moving the decimal places to the left.
  2. In the case of the number 5.2081 x 1012, you will be moving the decimal point over five spaces to the right. If the exponent is a -7, you move left seven places; if the exponent is a 5, move right five places.
  3. You may have to add them in front of or behind the number, depending on whether you are moving left or right. If you're moving the decimal point over 12 spaces to the right from the number 5.2081, then the new number becomes 5208100000000.
  4. Go through the digits, from right to left, putting a comma in front of every group of three digits. For example, 5208100000000 becomes 5,208,100,000,000.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    How do I know the number of significant figures?
    Donagan
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    The number of digits in the decimal number is the number of significant digits.
  • Question
    What is 24 in scientific notation?
    Donagan
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    24 = 2.4 x 10.
  • Question
    How would I convert 1.23 x 10^-5 to 1.23 x 10^5?
    Donagan
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Multiply by 10^10.
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About This Article

JohnK Wright V
Co-authored by:
Texas Certified Math Teacher
This article was co-authored by JohnK Wright V. JohnK Wright V is a Certified Math Teacher at Bridge Builder Academy in Plano, Texas. With over 20 years of teaching experience, he is a Texas SBEC Certified 8-12 Mathematics Teacher. He has taught in six different schools and has taught pre-algebra, algebra 1, geometry, algebra 2, pre-calculus, statistics, math reasoning, and math models with applications. He was a Mathematics Major at Southeastern Louisiana and he has a Bachelor of Science from The University of the State of New York (now Excelsior University) and a Master of Science in Computer Information Systems from Boston University. This article has been viewed 125,021 times.
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Co-authors: 23
Updated: May 24, 2023
Views: 125,021
Categories: Conversion Aids
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 125,021 times.

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    Feb 23, 2017

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