SquidInSunglasses
Bluelighter
I've always wanted to get a shirt that says "Engineering: Like Physics, Only Useful".
you've lost me.For instance, 5.89e-7 can also be written 589e-9; and if it happens to be a length, that is 589 nanometres.
No -- you forgot the minus sign in front of the exponent, which means you need to divide by a power of ten as opposed to multiplying. So 5.89e-7 = 5.89 * 10-7 = 5.89 ten-millionths, and 589e-9 = 589 * 10-9 = 589 one-thousand-millionths. Which are the same amount. But there is no prefix for * 10-7; only micro- for * 10-6 or nano- for * 10-9.you've lost me.
5.89e-7 is 5.89 * 10^7 which is 58,900,000 or fifty-eight million, nine hundred thousand.
589e-9 is 5.89 * 10^9 which is 5,890,000,000 or five billion, eight hundred and 90 million.
so how can 5.89e-7 also be written 589e-9? - they are two completely different numbers.
you've lost me.
5.89e-7 is 5.89 * 10^7 which is 58,900,000 or fifty-eight million, nine hundred thousand.
589e-9 is 5.89 * 10^9 which is 5,890,000,000 or five billion, eight hundred and 90 million.
so how can 5.89e-7 also be written 589e-9? - they are two completely different numbers.
alasdair
Our stupid govt has committed to buying the F35. Cutting billions from our healthcare to buy a jet that does not meet any kind of performance targets. And they keep telling us we are lucky cause we got in on them early...retardsIf we consider that development of the F-35 multirole fighters has so far cost over $1.3 trillion, and the fact that it has not yet proven itself to be more operationally effective than previous generations of fighters (in fact, it's becoming more likely that it's a white elephant that the Pentagon keeps throwing money at), then I think the ISS is a good investment on the scientific return. The building of the ISS did mean that the US had to cancel the construction of the Superconducting Super Collider in 1993, as the budget was not available for both (the Large Hadron Collider was built in Europe to fulfil the same purposes instead), which perhaps has more scientific merit than the ISS. It's all subjective, I guess.
I suppose it depends on what price you put on knowledge and what kind of knowledge you think is worth paying for. Perhaps the equivalent of buying a book instead of a bottle of vodka..or buying an encyclopedia rather than a year's subscription to Hello magazine.
I'm very much looking forward to the James Webb Telescope being launched, hopefully on schedule, in 2018. We have the Juno mission to look forward to this year![]()
you are right - i missed the minus sign but...No -- you forgot the minus sign in front of the exponent, which means you need to divide by a power of ten as opposed to multiplying. So 5.89e-7 = 5.89 * 10-7 = 5.89 ten-millionths, and 589e-9 = 589 * 10-9 = 589 one-thousand-millionths. Which are the same amount.
indeed. but that is a separate issue.But there is no prefix for * 10-7; only micro- for * 10-6 or nano- for * 10-9.
never mind. i missed the omission of the decimal point in "589e-9".
but, while the coefficient can be any real number, scientific notation rarely uses a whole number in the hundreds as the coefficient. indeed, normalized notation requires that, for a coefficient m: 1 ≤ |m| < 10
so, 5.89e-7 = 589e-9 but nobody would ever use the latter.
alasdair