It's moved one to the left. For example, if you have 0.5 * 10 that will give you 5.0
You mean one to the right?
Move the decimal point left to multiply by a negative power of ten. For example, 5X10-3 is 0.005
One to one
Multiplying a real number by a positive power of ten moves the decimal point that number (the exponent) of places to the right. Multiplying by a negative power of ten moves it to the left. For example, the -3 power of 10 is 1/1000; multiplying by that moves the decimal point 3 places to the left.
When you multiply by ten to a power, move the decimal point to the right by the number of places of the power. 3.6 x 10 ^4 move decimal 4 places to right = 36000
The answer depends on the power of ten in question.
Move the decimal point to the right one time.
right
It is not. For positive powers of ten, the decimal point moves to the right when multiplying and to the left when dividing. For negative powers of ten the point moves in the opposite directions.
Move the decimal point left to multiply by a negative power of ten. For example, 5X10-3 is 0.005
Any time you multiply or divide by a power of ten, it appears as if the decimal is moving.
One to one
Simply move the decimal point one place to the RIGHT. For example 12.345 multiplied by ten - is 123.45.
When you multipy 45.3 by 10 it yields 453. If you multiply any decimal by a factor of 10 then the decimal point will move right side.
It is not. For positive powers of ten, the decimal point moves to the right when multiplying and to the left when dividing. For negative powers of ten the point moves in the opposite directions.
It the power is d, where d is a signed integer, the decimal point moves d place to the right.
1225 when you multiply a number by ten, move the decimal point one place to the right
To multiply by 10k move the decimal point k places to the right - if necessary add 0s after the last digit. To divide by 10k move the decimal point k places to the left - if necessary add 0s between the decimal point and the first digit.