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Order of magnitude

The order of magnitude    of a number is the power of 10 that most closely approximates it. Thus, the order of magnitude refers to the scale (or size) of a value. Each power of 10 represents a different order of magnitude. For example, 10 1 , 10 2 , 10 3 , and so forth, are all different orders of magnitude, as are 10 0 = 1 , 10 −1 , 10 −2 , and 10 −3 . To find the order of magnitude of a number, take the base-10 logarithm of the number and round it to the nearest integer, then the order of magnitude of the number is simply the resulting power of 10. For example, the order of magnitude of 800 is 10 3 because log 10 800 2.903 , which rounds to 3. Similarly, the order of magnitude of 450 is 10 3 because log 10 450 2.653 , which rounds to 3 as well. Thus, we say the numbers 800 and 450 are of the same order of magnitude: 10 3 . However, the order of magnitude of 250 is 10 2 because log 10 250 2.397 , which rounds to 2.

An equivalent but quicker way to find the order of magnitude of a number is first to write it in scientific notation and then check to see whether the first factor is greater than or less than 10 = 10 0.5 3 . The idea is that 10 = 10 0.5 is halfway between 1 = 10 0 and 10 = 10 1 on a log base-10 scale. Thus, if the first factor is less than 10 , then we round it down to 1 and the order of magnitude is simply whatever power of 10 is required to write the number in scientific notation. On the other hand, if the first factor is greater than 10 , then we round it up to 10 and the order of magnitude is one power of 10 higher than the power needed to write the number in scientific notation. For example, the number 800 can be written in scientific notation as 8 × 10 2 . Because 8 is bigger than 10 3 , we say the order of magnitude of 800 is 10 2 + 1 = 10 3 . The number 450 can be written as 4.5 × 10 2 , so its order of magnitude is also 10 3 because 4.5 is greater than 3. However, 250 written in scientific notation is 2.5 × 10 2 and 2.5 is less than 3, so its order of magnitude is 10 2 .

The order of magnitude of a number is designed to be a ballpark estimate for the scale (or size) of its value. It is simply a way of rounding numbers consistently to the nearest power of 10. This makes doing rough mental math with very big and very small numbers easier. For example, the diameter of a hydrogen atom is on the order of 10 −10 m, whereas the diameter of the Sun is on the order of 10 9 m, so it would take roughly 10 9 / 10 −10 = 10 19 hydrogen atoms to stretch across the diameter of the Sun. This is much easier to do in your head than using the more precise values of 1.06 × 10 −10 m for a hydrogen atom diameter and 1.39 × 10 9 m for the Sun’s diameter, to find that it would take 1.31 × 10 19 hydrogen atoms to stretch across the Sun’s diameter. In addition to being easier, the rough estimate is also nearly as informative as the precise calculation.

Known ranges of length, mass, and time

The vastness of the universe and the breadth over which physics applies are illustrated by the wide range of examples of known lengths, masses, and times (given as orders of magnitude) in [link] . Examining this table will give you a feeling for the range of possible topics in physics and numerical values. A good way to appreciate the vastness of the ranges of values in [link] is to try to answer some simple comparative questions, such as the following:

Questions & Answers

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Sep 19, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12031/1.5
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