6.2.3

Estimation

Test yourself

Order of Magnitude

The order of magnitude of a number is the power of 10 that most closely approximates it. It refers to the scale (or size) of a value. Each power of 10 represents a different order of magnitude.

Illustrative background for Height of a humanIllustrative background for Height of a human ?? "content

Height of a human

  • The height of an average adult in the UK is about 1.70 m.
    • The order of magnitude estimate for the height of a human is 1 m.
      • 1 m is more appropriate than 0.1 m or 10 m.
Illustrative background for Mass of the SunIllustrative background for Mass of the Sun ?? "content

Mass of the Sun

  • The actual mass of the Sun is 1.989 ×1030 kg.
    • A sensible order of magnitude estimate to use is 1030 kg.
Illustrative background for Walking speedIllustrative background for Walking speed ?? "content

Walking speed

  • We can estimate that we walk at a speed of 1 m/s.
  • In reality, we might walk slightly faster or slower - but 1 m/s is a better estimate than 0.1 m/s, 10 m/s or 100 m/s!

Jump to other topics

1Space, Time & Motion

2The Particulate Nature of Matter

3Wave Behaviour

4Fields

4.1Circular Motion

4.2Newton's Law of Gravitation

4.3Fields

4.4Fields at Work

4.5Electric Fields

4.6Magnetic Effect of Electric Currents

4.7Heating Effect of Currents

4.8Electromagnetic Induction

4.9Power Generation & Transmission

4.10Capacitance

5Nuclear & Quantum Physics

6Measurements

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium