can someone help me out please? I forgot what the E means. It's for homework, how much is 9.6E10? Karma for the first person who helps.
9.6 x 10^10
9.6^10?
I have no idea, but I googled and picked the closest thing to what I thought was right.
CH3OH+HO2=CH2OH+H2O2
lol
CH3OH+HO2=CH2OH+H2O2
lol
there you go.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10
just put it into your calculator
and you'll get that
That's chemistry lol, I love that stuff =P.ryan_14 wrote:
I have no idea, but I googled and picked the closest thing to what I thought was right.
CH3OH+HO2=CH2OH+H2O2
lol
96,000,000,000
6648326359.9150104576
9.6 to the 10th power?
9.6 to the 10th power?
i dont think you're gonna get into Colorado Airforce academy with those skillz.
how did you go from a simple math expression to balancing a chemical equation?ryan_14 wrote:
I have no idea, but I googled and picked the closest thing to what I thought was right.
CH3OH+HO2=CH2OH+H2O2
lol
Yea, that equals what my number is, but I need to know what the number looks like in decimals.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10
thareaper254 wrote:
Yea, that equals what my number is, but I need to know what the number looks like in decimals.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
96,000,000,000
are you positive?Flaming_Maniac wrote:
thareaper254 wrote:
Yea, that equals what my number is, but I need to know what the number looks like in decimals.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10Flaming_Maniac wrote:
96,000,000,000
If it's 9.6 x 10^10, then it's 96,000,000,000. No decimals.
96000000000thareaper254 wrote:
Yea, that equals what my number is, but I need to know what the number looks like in decimals.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10
Go out and buy yourself a proper calculator
I have a TI-83 Plus... It just shows 9.6E10 and it doesn't change to decimals.
42 root 69
So let me get this straight. The E stands for 10 zeros?
this is correct.HeimdalX wrote:
9.6 x 10^10
Remember Me As A Time Of Day
the Ex equals: * 10^x
TI-83 and it doesn't show decimals? No freakin' way. If that's a graphing calc, then it should show it depending on your settings, because I have a cheap Sharp calculator, and it shows it, you just gotta change the settings where you view it, I don't really remember how. Sorry.thareaper254 wrote:
I have a TI-83 Plus... It just shows 9.6E10 and it doesn't change to decimals.
He never said anything about mathHeimdalX wrote:
how did you go from a simple math expression to balancing a chemical equation?ryan_14 wrote:
I have no idea, but I googled and picked the closest thing to what I thought was right.
CH3OH+HO2=CH2OH+H2O2
lol
It shows decimals. What I mean is, instead of showing 96,000,000,000 it shows 9.6E10 so I didn't really understand how to read it.nonexistentusmc wrote:
TI-83 and it doesn't show decimals? No freakin' way. If that's a graphing calc, then it should show it depending on your settings, because I have a cheap Sharp calculator, and it shows it, you just gotta change the settings where you view it, I don't really remember how. Sorry.thareaper254 wrote:
I have a TI-83 Plus... It just shows 9.6E10 and it doesn't change to decimals.
Thanks for the help people. going back to do my homework.
Last edited by thareaper254 (2007-02-27 17:59:52)
Well the E basically stands for the exponent. If I'm correct, most of this "scientific" stuff is a # x 10^#, as in your case it'd be 9.6 x 10^10. So the E will be the ^10. If it was 9.6E7, then it'll be 9.6 x 10^7. Not necessarily the amount of zeros, because in the problem you have, you had a decimal, which offsets the "places". If you had 9E10, then it'd be the number of zeros.
Simple terms would be I guess, the number of decimal places? I hope that cleared it up more than made it more confusing. LOL.
Simple terms would be I guess, the number of decimal places? I hope that cleared it up more than made it more confusing. LOL.
I have never seen anybody keep such a close eye on their karma than you reaper...