A car travels 7000 metres during a speed test. Write this distance in standard form.
For large numbers, move the decimal left until the first number is between 1 and 10. Count the moves to find the positive power of ten.
Standard form allows large numbers to be written neatly without long strings of zeros. When a number is greater than one, its decimal point moves to the left until the first number is between 1 and 10. The number of moves determines the positive exponent for 10. This makes numbers easier to compare, especially in scientific or technical work.
A car travels 7000 metres during a long-distance test. Instead of writing 7000, it can be expressed as 7.0 × 10³ metres. Using standard form helps engineers and scientists work with distances and measurements in a consistent, compact way. For instance, 1 kilometre equals 1.0 × 10³ metres, so both 7000 m and 1 km can be expressed using powers of ten.
Convert 48000 to standard form.
Convert 1200000 to standard form.
Convert 95000 to standard form.
Standard form is widely used in science and technology. For example, Earth’s radius is about 6.4 × 10⁶ m, and the speed of sound is roughly 3.4 × 10³ m/s. Expressing quantities this way saves time and prevents mistakes when working with very large or very small measurements.
Memorise the first few powers of ten to make conversions quick: 10³ = 1000, 10⁴ = 10000, and 10⁵ = 100000. This will save time during your GCSE Maths exam when converting between large and small numbers in standard form.