Understanding Standard Form
Standard form is basically a shorthand way of writing numbers that are either ridiculously large (like 8,290,000) or incredibly small (like 0.0071). Instead of writing out all those zeros, you use powers of 10 to do the heavy lifting.
The magic formula is a × 10ⁿ, where 'a' is always a number between 1 and 10, and 'n' tells you how many places to move the decimal point. Think of it as moving the decimal point to create a neat, tidy number multiplied by 10 raised to some power.
For big numbers, you move the decimal left and get a positive power (like 8.29 × 10⁶ for 8,290,000). For tiny numbers, you move the decimal right and get a negative power (like 7.1 × 10⁻³ for 0.0071).
Quick tip: Count how many places you move the decimal point - that's your power of 10!
The beauty of standard form is that it makes calculations with extreme numbers much simpler, and you'll use it loads in physics and chemistry when dealing with everything from planetary distances to atomic measurements.