When we need to write our number using expanded notation and powers of ten, we can tackle this in two steps.
The topic on expanded notation is helpful, to refresh your memory, but to summarise, it means we are breaking our number into separate 'chunks', where each chunk represents the value of each digit. So, think of a number like $24$24. This has $2$2 tens, and $4$4 units, so would be $20+4$20+4, in expanded notation. We make sure that we expand every digit, so thinking of place value is really helpful here.
Number | Expanded notation |
---|---|
$3468$3468 | $3000+400+60+8$3000+400+60+8 |
$23179$23179 | $20000+3000+100+70+9$20000+3000+100+70+9 |
Number Expanded notation
$3468$3468 $3000+400+60+8$3000+400+60+8
$23179$23179 $20000+3000+100+70+9$20000+3000+100+70+9
Our next step involves looking at each chunk of our expanded notation and considering if we can express it as a power of ten. Powers of $10$10are new, so in the video you are able to see how we can rename $10$10, $100$100 and $1000$1000 as powers of $10$10.
$10=10=10^1$10=10=101
$100=10\times10=10^2$100=10×10=102
$1000=10\times10\times10=10^3$1000=10×10×10=103
Let's take a look at working through steps 1 and 2 in our first video.
In our second video, we take a number, use expanded notation, and then rename some values using the power of ten. This is where we use what we learnt in video 1, and see how we can express numbers in expanded notation, to the power of ten.
Express $2487$2487 in the expanded form using index notation. For example, $245$245 in this form is equal to $2\times10^2+4\times10^1+5\times1$2×102+4×101+5×1.
Write the number expressed by: $2\times10^5+5\times10^4+6\times10^3+7\times10^1$2×105+5×104+6×103+7×101.
Note: Do not use comma separators