E-book Correction Possible error in vol 1 chap 4 part 1 Scientific notation

Thread Starter

Auke L. Klazema

Joined Nov 21, 2014
7

Wendy

Joined Mar 24, 2008
23,421
Take note of those two numbers and of the relative sparsity of non-zero digits in them. For the mass of the proton, all we have is a "167" preceded by 23 zeros before the decimal point. For the number of electrons per second in 1 amp, we have "625" followed by 16 zeros. We call the span of non-zero digits (from first to last), plus any zero digits not merely used for placeholding, the "significant digits" of any number.
Note the section describes numbers of electrons vs. mass of a proton.

Not verified.
 

ScottWang

Joined Aug 23, 2012
7,398
Hi All,

First post. I think there might be an error in chapter 4 part one of volume one.
http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_1/chpt_4/1.html

Take note of those two numbers and of the relative sparsity of non-zero digits in them. For the mass of the proton, all we have is a "167" preceded by 23 zeros before the decimal point.​

It talks about 23 zeros before the decimal point. Shouldn't that be after the decimal point?

Greetings,
ALK
In the beginning I was thought as you did, but I saw many times tried to figure out why it describe that way, I think the "before" here was represent the number is less than 1, if using "after" it means that the number is bigger than 1.

I think these are the position and direction problem, if the decimal point "." is a standard position, the right side is the number less than 1, and the left side is the number bigger than 1, so when we comparing the "." and 167 or 23 zeros, the "." is on "after" position, the 167 or 23 zeros are on the "before" position.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
00000 00000 00000 00000 000

Proton mass = 0.00000000000000000000000167 grams

a "167" preceded by 23 zeros before the decimal point.
 

Wendy

Joined Mar 24, 2008
23,421
Ah, so it should be rephrased,

Take note of those two numbers and of the relative sparsity of non-zero digits in them. For the mass of the proton, all we have is a "167" preceded by 23 zeros before the decimal point. For the number of electrons per second in 1 amp, we have "625" followed by 16 zeros. We call the span of non-zero digits (from first to last), plus any zero digits not merely used for placeholding, the "significant digits" of any number.
Take note of those two numbers and of the relative sparsity of non-zero digits in them. For the mass of the proton, all we have is a "167" preceded by 23 zeros after the decimal point. For the number of electrons per second in 1 amp, we have "625" followed by 16 zeros. We call the span of non-zero digits (from first to last), plus any zero digits not merely used for placeholding, the "significant digits" of any number.

OK, verified.
 
Top