Multiplying Decimals
Multiplying Decimals
Question: What is 0.1 × 0.1 ?
Misconception
As 1 × 1 = 1
then by comparison
0.1 × 0.1 = 0.1
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Correct
The answer is 0.01 as you are multiplying
which means
This has value 1 100or 0.01 as a decimal.
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Further Explanation
Consider the simplest case as discussed above
0.1 × 0.1
0.1 is the same as
(a tenth), so 0.1 × 0.1 is the same as
times
.
But what does this mean?
When we point at boxes containing 6 eggs each and say "3
of those boxes please", we walk out with 18 eggs, that is 3
times 6.
The meaning of times can be therefore be interchanged
with of.
Hence
times
can be seen as one tenth of one tenth which is one hundredth or
or 0.01,
To summarise:
one tenth of one tenth = one hundredth

So 0.1 × 0.1 = 0.01
Generalization
The method that we have used for this simple case can be
generalised to multiplying any two decimal numbers together. For
example, what is the value of 54 321 × 0.06?
We know how to multiply 54 321 × 6, but how do we cope with
the decimal points in 54 321 × 0.06?
The rule is:
first perform the multiplication as if there were no
decimal points in it, giving here the number 325 926
then count how many digits are behind (to the right of)
the decimal point in both numbers, in this case 5 (3 + 2)
insert the decimal point that many digits from the
right to give the correct answer, in this case, move 5 places
from the right to give 3.25926
To understand why the rule works we look at its individual
component parts it is best to tackle this by applying the
principal of finding something similar which we can cope with,
and then working out the difference between this and the case in
hand.
Applying this method, we multiply first the numbers ignoring
the decimal point, then examine the effect of having the decimal
points as originally given.
(Remember that a number without a decimal point is the same as
that number with a decimal point to its right, e.g. 139 = 139.0 )
Moving a decimal point one place to the left amounts to
dividing by 10, e.g. 13.9 is the same as
.
(Similarly, moving the point to the right is the same as
multiplying by 10.)
Moving it again to the left means dividing by 10 again. So,
having moved the point 2 places to the left amounts to dividing
by 100. Moving it 3 places to the left amounts to dividing by
1000, and so on.
Note:
What happens if one needs to move the point more positions
than there are digits? For example, if we have the result 76 from
the first stage of multiplying 0.19 by 0.04; we now need to put
the decimal point 4 positions from the right of 76? To do this we
simply add zeros on the left of the number, as many as are
needed. So for moving 4 positions to the left in 76, we first
write it as 00076 and then move along the decimal point 4
positions from the left to get the answer 0.0076.
Returning to our example of multiplying 54.321 by 0.06, we
used 54 321 instead of 54.321, which meant that the number that
was 1000 times bigger than the given number, which consequently
made the answer 1000 times too big. Further, we continued by
using 6 instead of 0.06, a number 100 times bigger than was
given, thus making the result yet another 100 times bigger. To
bring the result back to what it should have been, we must divide
the number 325 926 by 1000 and again by 100 or doing it in
one go, dividing by 100 000 ( 1000 × 100 ).
Referring back to our rule, dividing by 100 000 (5 zeros) is
the same as moving the point 5 places from the right (remember
this 5 came from the 3 digits to the right of the decimal point
in 54.321 which were initially ignored and the 2 digits to the
right of the decimal point in 0.06).