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Standardformkalkulator – Konverter Tall til Vitenskapelig Notasjon

Convert any number to standard form (scientific notation) or convert standard form back to an ordinary number. Our standard form calculator shows each step and handles very large and very small numbers with precision.

Slik bruker du denne kalkulatoren

  1. Skriv inn Mode
  2. Skriv inn Enter Number
  3. Skriv inn Coefficient (a, where 1 ≤ a < 10)
  4. Skriv inn Exponent (n)
  5. Skriv inn Slope (m) — from y = mx + b
  6. Klikk på Beregn-knappen
  7. Les resultatet som vises under kalkulatoren

What Is Standard Form?

Standard form has two different meanings depending on context:

1. Scientific Notation (numbers): A number written as a × 10ⁿ, where 1 ≤ |a| < 10 and n is an integer. Used to express very large or very small numbers compactly. Example: 0.000456 = 4.56 × 10⁻⁴.

2. Standard Form of a Linear Equation: Written as Ax + By = C, where A, B, C are integers and A ≥ 0. Example: y = 2x + 3 → −2x + y = 3 → 2x − y = −3.

In the UK and some other countries, "standard form" exclusively means scientific notation. In US mathematics education, it often refers to the linear equation form. This calculator handles both.

How to Convert to Scientific Notation

Steps to convert a number to standard form (scientific notation):

  1. Move the decimal point until you have a number between 1 and 10 (the coefficient a)
  2. Count how many places you moved the decimal — this is the exponent n
  3. If you moved left (large number): n is positive. If you moved right (small number): n is negative
  4. Write as a × 10ⁿ

Example 1 (large number): 3,470,000
Move decimal 6 places left: 3.47
Result: 3.47 × 10⁶

Example 2 (small number): 0.0000089
Move decimal 6 places right: 8.9
Result: 8.9 × 10⁻⁶

Converting Standard Form Back to Ordinary Numbers

To convert a × 10ⁿ back to an ordinary number:

Example: 6.02 × 10²³ (Avogadro's number) = 602,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

Example: 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ (electron charge in coulombs) = 0.00000000000000000016

Operations in Standard Form

Multiplication: Multiply coefficients, add exponents.
(3 × 10⁴) × (2 × 10³) = 6 × 10⁷

Division: Divide coefficients, subtract exponents.
(8 × 10⁶) ÷ (4 × 10²) = 2 × 10⁴

Addition/Subtraction: Convert to same exponent first, then add/subtract coefficients.
(3.5 × 10⁴) + (2 × 10³) = (3.5 × 10⁴) + (0.2 × 10⁴) = 3.7 × 10⁴

If the result has a coefficient outside 1–10, adjust: 15 × 10³ = 1.5 × 10⁴.

Standard Form of Linear Equations

The standard form of a linear equation is Ax + By = C where A, B, C are integers (no fractions), A ≥ 0, and GCD(A, B, C) = 1.

Converting from slope-intercept (y = mx + b):

  1. Move the x term to the left: −mx + y = b
  2. Multiply by −1 if A is negative: mx − y = −b
  3. If m is a fraction, multiply all terms by the denominator

Example: y = (3/2)x − 4
−(3/2)x + y = −4 → multiply by 2: −3x + 2y = −8 → multiply by −1: 3x − 2y = 8. Standard form: 3x − 2y = 8.

Why Is Standard Form Used?

Scientific notation (standard form) is essential because:

Used extensively in: chemistry (Avogadro's number 6.022 × 10²³), physics (speed of light 3 × 10⁸ m/s), astronomy (Earth-Sun distance 1.496 × 10¹¹ m), and computer science (memory sizes, computation speeds).

Standard Form in Different Countries

Terminology varies internationally:

This can cause confusion in international math resources. When in doubt, check whether the context involves numbers (likely scientific notation) or equations (likely Ax + By = C form).

Sist oppdatert: March 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 0.00045 in standard form?

0.00045 = 4.5 × 10⁻⁴. Move the decimal 4 places right to get 4.5 (between 1 and 10), so the exponent is −4.

What is 6000000 in standard form?

6,000,000 = 6 × 10⁶. Move the decimal 6 places left to get 6.0, so the exponent is 6.

What is the difference between standard form and scientific notation?

In the UK, they're the same thing: a number written as a × 10ⁿ where 1 ≤ |a| < 10. In the US, "scientific notation" is a × 10ⁿ, while "standard form" usually refers to a linear equation format Ax + By = C.

How do you add numbers in standard form?

Convert both numbers to the same power of 10, then add the coefficients. Example: (3 × 10⁵) + (4 × 10⁴) = (3 × 10⁵) + (0.4 × 10⁵) = 3.4 × 10⁵.

What is Avogadro's number in standard form?

Avogadro's number = 6.022 × 10²³. This represents the number of atoms/molecules in one mole of a substance.

Can the coefficient in standard form be negative?

Yes. For negative numbers: −0.00045 = −4.5 × 10⁻⁴. The coefficient can be negative; the condition is that |a| must be between 1 and 10 (not including 10).

What is standard form of a quadratic?

Standard form of a quadratic is ax² + bx + c = 0 (or y = ax² + bx + c). Vertex form is y = a(x − h)² + k. Standard form doesn't factor easily but clearly shows coefficients.

How do I convert a fraction to standard form?

Divide to get a decimal: 1/3 = 0.333... = 3.33... × 10⁻¹. For exact scientific notation, use the decimal representation. Note that 1/3 is a repeating decimal and can't be expressed exactly in finite digits.

What is 10 in standard form?

10 = 1 × 10¹. The coefficient must be between 1 and 10 (exclusive), so 10 itself becomes 1.0 × 10¹, not 10 × 10⁰.

Is standard form the same as expanded form?

No. Standard form = compact scientific notation (a × 10ⁿ). Expanded form = writing a number showing the value of each digit, e.g., 4,523 = 4,000 + 500 + 20 + 3. They serve opposite purposes — standard form compresses, expanded form elaborates.