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  2. Scientific notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_notation

    In scientific notation, this is written 9.109 383 56 × 10 −31 kg. The Earth's mass is about 5 972 400 000 000 000 000 000 000 kg. [21] In scientific notation, this is written 5.9724 × 10 24 kg. The Earth's circumference is approximately 40 000 000 m. [22] In scientific notation, this is 4 × 10 7 m. In engineering notation, this is written ...

  3. Power of 10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_of_10

    Scientific notation is a way of writing numbers of very large and very small sizes compactly. A number written in scientific notation has a significand (sometime called a mantissa) multiplied by a power of ten. Sometimes written in the form: m × 10 n. Or more compactly as: 10 n. This is generally used to denote powers of 10.

  4. Parts-per notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parts-per_notation

    In science and engineering, the parts-per notation is a set of pseudo-units to describe small values of miscellaneous dimensionless quantities, e.g. mole fraction or mass fraction. Since these fractions are quantity-per-quantity measures, they are pure numbers with no associated units of measurement .

  5. Nano- - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nano-

    Nano (symbol n) is a unit prefix meaning one billionth.Used primarily with the metric system, this prefix denotes a factor of 10 −9 or 0.000 000 001.It is frequently encountered in science and electronics for prefixing units of time and length.

  6. Basis point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basis_point

    A related concept is one part per ten thousand, ⁠ 1 / 10,000 ⁠.The same unit is also (rarely) called a permyriad, literally meaning "for (every) myriad (ten thousand)". [4] [5] If used interchangeably with basis point, the permyriad is potentially confusing because an increase of one basis point to a 10 basis point value is generally understood to mean an increase to 11 basis points; not ...

  7. Metric prefix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_prefix

    Larger multiples of the second such as kiloseconds and megaseconds are occasionally encountered in scientific contexts, but are seldom used in common parlance. For long-scale scientific work, particularly in astronomy, the Julian year or annum (a) is a standardised variant of the year, equal to exactly 31 557 600 seconds (⁠365 + 1 / 4 ⁠ days).

  8. Angstrom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angstrom

    Portrait of Anders Ångström [15]. In 1868, Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström created a chart of the spectrum of sunlight, in which he expressed the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum in multiples of one ten-millionth of a millimetre (or 10 −7 mm.) [16] [17] Ångström's chart and table of wavelengths in the solar spectrum became widely used in ...

  9. nth root - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nth_root

    In polar form, a single nth root may be found by the formula r e i θ n = r n ⋅ e i θ / n . {\displaystyle {\sqrt[{n}]{re^{i\theta }}}={\sqrt[{n}]{r}}\cdot e^{i\theta /n}.} Here r is the magnitude (the modulus, also called the absolute value ) of the number whose root is to be taken; if the number can be written as a+bi then r = a 2 + b 2 ...