Dividing Powers of 10

Student Summary

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 10510^5 and divide it by 10210^2

We know that 10510^5 has 5 factors that are 10, and 2 of these factors can be divided by the 2 factors of 10 in 10210^2 to make 1. That leaves 52=35-2=3 factors of 10, or 10310^3.

This will work for other powers of 10, too. For example 10561023=105623=1033\frac{10^{56}}{10^{23}}=10^{56-23}=10^{33}.

This rule also extends to 10010^0. If we look at 106100\frac{10^6}{10^0}, using the exponent rule gives 106010^{6-0}, which is equal to 10610^6. So dividing 10610^6 by 10010^0doesn’t change its value. That means if we want the rule to work when the exponent is 0, then 10010^0 must equal 1.

Visual / Anchor Chart

Standards

Building On
5.NF.5.b

Interpret multiplication as scaling (resizing).

Addressing
8.EE.1

Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions.

Building Toward
8.EE.1

Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions.