Unit 7 Exponents and Scientific Notation (Family Materials)
Section A Exponent Review
This week your student will learn the rules for multiplying and dividing expressions with exponents. Exponents are a way of keeping track of how many times a number has been repeatedly multiplied. For example, instead of writing
Using our understanding of repeated multiplication, we’ll figure out several “rules” for exponents. For example, suppose we want to understand the expression
Using similar reasoning, we can figure out that when working with powers of powers, we multiply the exponents together:
These patterns will lead to other discoveries later on.
Here is a task to try with your student:
Jada and Noah were trying to understand the expression
. Noah said, “since we are multiplying, we will get .” Jada said, “But I don’t think you can get 20 10s multiplied together from that.” Do you agree with either of them? Next, Jada and Noah were thinking about a similar expression,
. Noah said, “Ok this one will be because you will have 5 groups of 4.” Jada said, “I agree it will be , but it’s because there will be 4 groups of 5.” Do you agree with either of them?
Solution:
Jada is correct. Rewriting
to show all the factors looks like . We can see that there are a total of 9 10s being multiplied. This helps us understand what’s going on when we use the rule to write . This time, Noah is correct. When we look at
, the outside exponent of 5 tells us that there are 5 s being multiplied together. So . This means there are 5 groups of 4 10s being multiplied together. We could write this out the long way as . This helps us understand what’s going on when we use the rule to write .
Section C Scientific Notation
This week your student will use powers of 10 to work with very large or very small numbers. For example, the United States mint has made over 500,000,000,000 pennies. In order to understand this number, we have to count all of the zeros. Since there are 11 of them this means there are 500 billion pennies. Using powers of 10, we can write this as
Not only do powers of 10 make it easier to write this number, but they also help avoid errors since it would be very easy to add or take away a zero when writing out the decimal without realizing! Writing numbers in this way is called scientific notation. We can use the exponent rules learned earlier to estimate and solve problems with scientific notation.
Here is a task to try with your student:
This table shows the top speeds of different vehicles.
vehicle | speed (kilometers per hour) |
---|---|
sports car | |
Apollo Command/Service Module | |
jet boat | |
autonomous drone |
Order the vehicles from fastest to slowest.
The top speed of a rocket sled is 10,326 kilometers per hour. Is this faster or slower than the autonomous drone?
Estimate how many times as fast the Apollo Command/Service Module is than the sports car.
Solutions
The order is: Apollo CSM, autonomous drone, jet boat, sports car. Since all of these values are in scientific notation, we can look at the power of 10 to compare. The speeds of the Apollo CSM and autonomous drone both have the highest power of 10 (
), so they are fastest. The Apollo CSM is faster than the drone because 3.99 is greater than 2.1. Similarly, the jet boat is faster than the sports car because their speeds both have the same power of 10 ( ) but 5.1 is greater than 4.15. The autonomous drone is faster than the rocket sled. In scientific notation, the rocket sled’s speed is
, and the drone’s speed is and 2.1 is greater than 1.0326. To find how many times as fast the Apollo CSM is than the sports car, we are trying to find out what number times
equals . So we are trying to compute . Since we are estimating, we can simplify the calculation to . Using exponent rules and our understanding of fractions, we have , so the Apollo CSM is about 100 times as fast as the sports car!