Current location - Training Enrollment Network - Mathematics courses - What's behind a million dollars?
What's behind a million dollars?
One, ten, hundred, thousand, ten thousand, one million, ten million, one hundred million, then one billion, ten billion, one hundred billion. ...

"Number" refers to the position occupied by each digit of a number. From the right, the first digit in the numerical sequence table is "unit", the second digit is "ten digits", the third digit is "hundred digits", the fourth digit is "thousand digits", the fifth digit is "ten thousand digits", and so on.

The same number represents different values because of different digits. For example, if Arabic numerals are used to represent numbers, the same' 8' in the tenth place means eight tens, in the hundredth place it means 800, in the hundredth place it means 800, and in the hundredth place it means 800 million.

Digital table:

Mega: stands for the twelfth power of 10.

Jing: stands for the sixteenth power of 10.

E: stands for the twentieth power of 10.

Xun: stands for the 24th power of 10.

Peng: It stands for the 28th power of 10.

Ditch: stands for the 32nd power of 10.

Jane: stands for 10 to the 36th power.

Infinity: means 10 to the 68th power.

Large number: stands for the 72nd power of 10.

Extended data:

Counting is also called counting. One of the basic concepts of arithmetic. The process of exponential growth of things. One (a), ten, hundred, thousand, ten thousand, one hundred thousand, one million (trillion), ten million, one billion, ten billion, one hundred billion ... are all units of counting.

When counting, you usually point to everything one by one, and read the numbers in the column of positive integers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, which correspond to the things you refer to one by one. This process is called counting. The above method of counting things one by one is called counting things one by one. If you count in groups of several, it is called cluster counting.

The decimal counting method is characterized by "full 10 into one". In other words, every 10 unit forms a higher unit adjacent to it. That is, 10 is called "ten", 10 is called "hundred", 10 is called "thousand", and 10 is called "ten thousand".

Baidu Encyclopedia-Numbers