Unit 7 Exponents And Scientific Notation — Unit Plan
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Lesson 2 Multiplying Powers of 10 8.EE.1Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. | — | In this lesson, we developed a rule for multiplying powers of 10: Multiplying powers of 10 corresponds to adding the exponents together. To see this, multiply and . We know that has two factors that are 10 and that has three factors that are 10. That means that has 5 factors that are 10. This will work for other powers of 10, too. For example, . | That's a Lot of Office Space! (1 problem)
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Lesson 4 Dividing Powers of 10 8.EE.1Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. | — | In this lesson, we developed a rule for dividing powers of 10: Dividing powers of 10 is the same as subtracting the exponent of the denominator from the exponent of the numerator. To see this, take and divide it by . We know that has 5 factors that are 10, and 2 of these factors can be divided by the 2 factors of 10 in to make 1. That leaves factors of 10, or . This will work for other powers of 10, too. For example . This rule also extends to . If we look at , using the exponent rule gives , which is equal to . So dividing by doesn’t change its value. That means if we want the rule to work when the exponent is 0, then must equal 1. | Why Subtract? (1 problem) Why is equal to ? Explain or show your thinking. Show SolutionSample response: because 4 factors that are 10 in the numerator and denominator are used to make 1, leaving 11 remaining factors that are 10. In other words, | — |
Lesson 5 Negative Exponents with Powers of 10 8.EE.1Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. | — | In this lesson, we observed that when we multiply a positive power of 10 by , the exponent decreases by 1. For example, . This is true for any power of 10. By using the rule with this example, we see that: . Notice that for the exponent rules we have developed to work, then must equal . | Negative Exponent True or False (1 problem) Mark each of the following equations as true or false. Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution
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Section A Check Section A Checkpoint | ||||
Lesson 6 What about Other Bases? 8.EE.1Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. | — | We can keep track of repeated factors using exponent rules. These rules also help us make sense of negative exponents and why a number to the power of 0 is defined as 1. These rules can be written symbolically where the base can be any positive number: | Spot the Mistake (1 problem)
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Section B Check Section B Checkpoint | ||||
Lesson 9 Describing Large and Small Numbers Using Powers of 10 8.EE.3Use numbers expressed in the form of a single digit times an integer power of 10 to estimate very large or very small quantities, and to express how many times as much one is than the other. | — | Sometimes powers of 10 are helpful for expressing quantities, especially very large or very small quantities. For example, the United States Mint has made over 500,000,000,000 pennies. To understand this number we can look at the number of zeros to know it is equivalent to 500 billion pennies. Since 1 billion can be written as , we can say that there are over pennies. Sometimes we may need to rewrite a number using a different power of 10. We can say that . Since the factor was multiplied by 100 to get , the factor of 500 was divided by 100 to keep the value of the entire expression the same. The same is true for very small quantities. For example, a single atom of carbon weighs about 0.0000000000000000000000199 grams. If we write this as a fraction we get . Using powers of 10, it becomes , which is a lot easier to write! Just as we did with large numbers, small numbers can be rewritten as an equivalent value with a different power of 10. In this example we can divide the factor 199 by 100 and multiply the factor by 100 to get . | Better with Powers of 10 (1 problem)
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Section C Check Section C Checkpoint | ||||
Lesson 13 Definition of Scientific Notation 8.EE.4Perform multiplication and division with numbers expressed in scientific notation, including problems where both standard decimal form and scientific notation are used. Use scientific notation and choose units of appropriate size for measurements of very large or very small quantities. Interpret scientific notation that has been generated by technology. | — | The total value of all the quarters made in 2014 was 400 million dollars. There are many ways to express this using powers of 10. We could write this as dollars, dollars, dollars, or many other ways. One special way to write this quantity is called scientific notation, where the first factor is a number greater than or equal to 1, but less than 10, and the second factor is an integer power of 10 In scientific notation, 400 million dollars would be written as dollars. Writing the number this way shows exactly where it lies between two consecutive powers of 10. The shows us the number is between and . The 4 shows us that the number is 4 tenths of the way to .
For scientific notation, the "" symbol is the standard way to show multiplication instead of the dot symbol. Some other examples of scientific notation are , , and . | Scientific Notation Check (1 problem) Determine which of the following numbers are written in scientific notation. If a number is not, write it in scientific notation.
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Lesson 14 Estimating with Scientific Notation 8.EE.1Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. 8.EE.3Use numbers expressed in the form of a single digit times an integer power of 10 to estimate very large or very small quantities, and to express how many times as much one is than the other. 8.EE.4Perform multiplication and division with numbers expressed in scientific notation, including problems where both standard decimal form and scientific notation are used. Use scientific notation and choose units of appropriate size for measurements of very large or very small quantities. Interpret scientific notation that has been generated by technology. | — | Multiplying numbers in scientific notation extends what we do when we multiply regular decimal numbers. For example, one way to find is to view 80 as 8 tens and to view 60 as 6 tens. The product is 48 hundreds or 4,800. Using scientific notation, we can write this calculation as To express the product in scientific notation, we would rewrite it as . Calculating using scientific notation is especially useful when dealing with very large or very small numbers. For example, there are about 39 million, or residents in California. The state has a water consumption goal of 42 gallons of water per person each day. To find how many gallons of water California would need each day if they met their goal, we can find the product , which is equal to . That’s more than 1 billion gallons of water each day. Comparing very large or very small numbers by estimation also becomes easier with scientific notation. For example, how many ants are there for every human? There are ants and humans. To find the number of ants per human, look at . Rewriting the numerator to have the number 50 instead of 5, we get . This gives us . Since is roughly equal to 6, there are about or 6 million ants per person! | Estimating with Scientific Notation (1 problem)
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Section D Check Section D Checkpoint | ||||
Unit 7 Assessment End-of-Unit Assessment | ||||