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what is a scientific notation#?
what is a scientific notation
|
what is a scientific notation#?
The Scientific format displays a number in exponential notation, replacing
part of the number with E+n, where E (which stands for Exponent) multiplies the preceding number by 10 to the nth power. For example, a 2-decimal Scientific format displays 12345678901 as 1.23E+10, which is 1.23 times 10 to the 10th power. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Tue, 16 Feb 2010 10:17:01 -0800, hisham wrote: what is a scientific notation |
what is a scientific notation#?
Scientific notation is generally used for very large or very small number. In
Physics an electron volt is 0.00000000000000000016 Volts there are 18 zeros in that number. For ease of writing it is expresses in scientific notation as 1.6 E -19 or 1.6 times 10 raised to the poser of -19 This is especailly important in computers as your computer can only express 15 siginificant digits. Without scientinfic notaiton that means that it would get to the 15th zero and then truncate the rest of the number to 0 and the value would be 0. -- HTH... Jim Thomlinson "hisham" wrote: what is a scientific notation |
what is a scientific notation#?
Check this out:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_notation "hisham" wrote: what is a scientific notation |
what is a scientific notation#?
"hisham" wrote:
what is a scientific notation In Excel, you can represent any number that way by selecting the Scientific format with some number of decimal places. By default, Excel will represent the number in the form x.yyyE+zz, where the number of "y" digits depends on the format. xE+zz means x times 10 to the z power. For example, 2E+6 is 2,000,000. And 2E-6 is 0.000002. Scientific notation has many purposes. Typically, it is used to express very large and very small numbers in a concise manner. But it can also be used, for example, when you want to express all numbers in a consistent way (e.g. the same number of digits) regardless of their magnitude. |
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