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Small number

Small numbers are numbers that are small compared with the numbers used in everyday life. Very small numbers often occur in fields such as chemistry, electronics and quantum physics.

Fractions

As soon as systems of weights and measures were devised, units were subdivided into smaller units: pounds were divided into ounces, pounds into shillings and pence. Beyond the smallest units, there was a need to use fractions to represent even smaller quantities. In systems such as the degrees minutes and seconds system, it is possible to represent one second of arc, equal to

of a circle.

Tiny numbers in science

Even smaller numbers are often found in science, which are so small that they are not easily dealt with using fractions. Scientific notation was created to handle very small and very large numbers.

Examples of small numbers describing everyday real-world objects are:

  • size of a bit on a computer hard disk
  • feature size of a structure on a microprocessor chip
  • wavelength of green light: 5.5 × 10-7 m
  • time taken by light to travel one meter: roughly 3 × 10-9 s
  • radius of a hydrogen atom: 2.5 × 10-11 m
  • the charge on an electron: roughly 1.6 × 10-19 C
  • please add more to this list

Other small numbers are found in particle physics and quantum physics:

Infinitesimals

Although all these numbers above are very small, they are all still real numbers greater than zero. Some fields of mathematics define infinitesimal numbers. An infinitesimal is a number greater than zero yet smaller than any positive real number.

Infinitesimal numbers were originally developed to create the differential and integral calculus, but were replaced by systems using limits when they were shown to lack theoretical rigor. More recent work has restored rigor to infinitesimals, making them once more a powerful mathematical tool.

Systems of infinitesimals can be generated in the same way as systems of transfinite numbers can be generated. Some mathematical systems such as surreal numbers and hyperreal numbers generate elaborate systems of infinitesimals with amazing properties.

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by fixing it.

See also:

External links

  • http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nuclear/rutsca3.html

Referenced By

List of mathematical topics (S-U)

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Small number".

 

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