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Multiplying and dividing by 0.1 and 0.01

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visibility 197update 7 months agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Multiply numbers by 0.1 and 0.01
  • Divide numbers by 0.1 and 0.01
 

🧠 Key Words

  • decimal number
  • equivalent calculations
  • inverse operation
Show Definitions
  • decimal number: A number that uses a decimal point to show values smaller than one.
  • equivalent calculations: Different calculations that give the same result.
  • inverse operation: An operation that reverses the effect of another, such as addition and subtraction.
 

The decimal number$0.1$ is the same as $\frac{1}{10}$.
So when you multiply a number by $0.1$, it has the same effect as dividing the number by $10$.

Example:
$8 \times 0.1 = 8 \times \frac{1}{10}$ and $8 \times \frac{1}{10} = 8 \div 10$

The decimal number $0.01$ is the same as $\frac{1}{100}$.
So when you multiply a number by $0.01$, it has the same effect as dividing the number by $100$.

Example:
$8 \times 0.01 = 8 \times \frac{1}{100}$ and $8 \times \frac{1}{100} = 8 \div 100$

When you divide a number by $0.1$, it has the same effect as multiplying the number by $10$.

Example:
$8 \div 0.1 = 8 \div \frac{1}{10}$ and $8 \div \frac{1}{10} = 8 \times 10$

When you divide a number by $0.01$, it has the same effect as multiplying the number by $100$.

Example:
$8 \div 0.01 = 8 \div \frac{1}{100}$ and $8 \div \frac{1}{100} = 8 \times 100$

 
📘 Worked example

a. Work out $32 \times 0.1$

b. Work out $4.2 \times 0.01$

c. Work out $6 \div 0.1$

d. Work out $4.156 \div 0.01$

Answer:

a. $32 \times 0.1 = 3.2$

b. $4.2 \times 0.01 = 0.042$

c. $6 \div 0.1 = 60$

d. $4.156 \div 0.01 = 415.6$

Multiplying by $0.1$ is the same as dividing by $10$, and $32 \div 10 = 3.2$

Multiplying by $0.01$ is the same as dividing by $100$, and $4.2 \div 100 = 0.042$

Dividing by $0.1$ is the same as multiplying by $10$, and $6 \times 10 = 60$

Dividing by $0.01$ is the same as multiplying by $100$, and $4.156 \times 100 = 415.6$

 

🧠 PROBLEM-SOLVING Strategy

Multiplying and Dividing by $0.1$ and $0.01$

Use these steps to work efficiently with decimal factors of one-tenth and one-hundredth.

  1. Recognise decimal–fraction equivalences:
    $0.1 = \dfrac{1}{10}$
    $0.01 = \dfrac{1}{100}$
  2. Multiplication rules:
    $\times\,0.1$ → same as $\div\,10$ → move decimal point 1 place left.
    $\times\,0.01$ → same as $\div\,100$ → move decimal point 2 places left.
  3. Division rules:
    $\div\,0.1$ → same as $\times\,10$ → move decimal point 1 place right.
    $\div\,0.01$ → same as $\times\,100$ → move decimal point 2 places right.
  4. Fraction check:
    • Multiplying by $0.1$ means multiplying by $\dfrac{1}{10}$.
    • Dividing by $0.01$ means dividing by $\dfrac{1}{100}$ = multiplying by $100$.
  5. Place-holding zeros: if the shift goes past all digits, add zeros to fill.

Quick examples

  • $32\times0.1=3.2$
  • $4.2\times0.01=0.042$
  • $6\div0.1=60$
  • $4.156\div0.01=415.6$
 

EXERCISES

1. Copy and complete these calculations. All the answers are in {20, 200, 0.2, 2}.

a. $20 \times 0.1 = 20 \div 10 = \square$

b. $200 \times 0.1 = 200 \div 10 = \square$

c. $2000 \times 0.1 = 2000 \div 10 = \square$

d. $2 \times 0.1 = 2 \div 10 = \square$

👀 Show answer

a. $2$    b. $20$    c. $200$    d. $0.2$

2. Copy and complete these calculations. All the answers are in {0.4, 40, 400, 4}.

a. $400 \times 0.01 = 400 \div 100 = \square$

b. $40\,000 \times 0.01 = 40\,000 \div 100 = \square$

c. $40 \times 0.01 = 40 \div 100 = \square$

d. $4000 \times 0.01 = 4000 \div 100 = \square$

👀 Show answer

a. $4$    b. $400$    c. $0.4$    d. $40$

 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Question: Sofia and Arun are discussing the best way to work out $56 \times 0.1$. Do their methods say the same thing?

Equipment: Pencil, paper, place-value table (optional), calculator (optional)

Method (discussion prompts):

  • Sofia: “When I multiply 56 by 0.1, I move the digits 5 and 6 one place to the right in the place-value table. That gives $5.6$.”
  • Arun: “When I multiply 56 by 0.1, I move the decimal point one place to the left. That also gives $5.6$.”
  1. a) Explain how both methods work. Whose method do you prefer?
  2. b) Describe how you would work out $56 \times 0.01$ using Sofia’s method and using Arun’s method.

Follow-up prompts:

1. How are the two methods equivalent in terms of place value?
2. How many places do the digits/decimal move when multiplying by $10^{-k}$?
👀 show answer
  • a: Both use the fact that multiplying by $0.1=10^{-1}$ makes the number ten times smaller.
    • Sofia: Move each digit one place right in a place-value table (tens → ones, ones → tenths), so $56 \to 5.6$.
    • Arun: Keep the digits fixed and move the decimal point one place left, also giving $5.6$.
    They are equivalent descriptions of the same place-value shift. Preference is personal; many students find the decimal-point method quicker once place value is secure.
  • b: Since $0.01=10^{-2}$, shift by two places:
    • Sofia: Move digits two places right: $56 \to 0.56$.
    • Arun: Move the decimal point two places left: $56 \to 0.56$.
    Therefore, $56 \times 0.01 = 0.56$.
  • General rule: Multiplying by $10^{-k}$ shifts place value by $k$ places toward smaller units (digits right / decimal left).
 

EXERCISES

4. Work out:

a. $62 \times 0.1$    b. $55 \times 0.1$    c. $125 \times 0.1$    d. $3.2 \times 0.1$

e. $37 \times 0.01$    f. $655 \times 0.01$    g. $750 \times 0.01$    h. $4 \times 0.01$

👀 Show answer

a. $6.2$    b. $5.5$    c. $12.5$    d. $0.32$

e. $0.37$    f. $6.55$    g. $7.5$    h. $0.04$

5. Copy and complete these calculations. All the answers are in {200, 2000, 2, 20}.

a. $2 \div 0.1 = 2 \times 10 = \square$

b. $20 \div 0.1 = 20 \times 10 = \square$

c. $200 \div 0.1 = 200 \times 10 = \square$

d. $0.2 \div 0.1 = 0.2 \times 10 = \square$

👀 Show answer

a. $20$    b. $200$    c. $2000$    d. $2$

6. Copy and complete these calculations. All the answers are in {40, 40000, 400, 4000}.

a. $4 \div 0.01 = 4 \times 100 = \square$

b. $40 \div 0.01 = 40 \times 100 = \square$

c. $400 \div 0.01 = 400 \times 100 = \square$

d. $0.4 \div 0.01 = 0.4 \times 100 = \square$

👀 Show answer

a. $400$    b. $4000$    c. $40000$    d. $40$

 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Question: Win uses equivalent calculations to work out $3.2 \div 0.1$ and $12.8 \div 0.01$. Can you explain her method and apply it yourself?

Equipment: Pencil, paper, calculator (optional)

Method (Win’s examples):

Example i:

$\dfrac{3.2}{0.1} = \dfrac{3.2 \times 10}{0.1 \times 10} = \dfrac{32}{1}$

So $3.2 \div 0.1 = 32 \div 1 = 32$

Example ii:

$\dfrac{12.8}{0.01} = \dfrac{12.8 \times 10}{0.01 \times 10} = \dfrac{128}{0.1}$

$\dfrac{128 \times 10}{0.1 \times 10} = \dfrac{1280}{1}$

So $12.8 \div 0.01 = 1280 \div 1 = 1280$

  1. a) Can you explain how Win’s method works? Do you like her method? Explain your answer.
  2. b) Work out:
    1. $0.45 \div 0.1$
    2. $78 \div 0.01$

Follow-up prompts:

1. Why does multiplying both the numerator and denominator by the same power of 10 make the calculation easier?
2. How is Win’s method related to the idea of equivalent fractions?
👀 show answer
  • a: Win’s method changes the division into one with a whole number divisor by multiplying both numbers by the same power of 10. This makes the calculation simpler without changing the value. It’s essentially using equivalent fractions.
  • b.i:$\dfrac{0.45}{0.1} = \dfrac{4.5}{1} = 4.5$
  • b.ii:$\dfrac{78}{0.01} = \dfrac{7800}{1} = 7800$
  • General rule: To divide by a decimal, multiply both the dividend and divisor by the same power of 10 to make the divisor a whole number, then divide normally.
 

EXERCISES

8. Work out:

a. $7 \div 0.1$    b. $4.5 \div 0.1$    c. $522 \div 0.1$    d. $0.67 \div 0.1$

e. $2 \div 0.01$    f. $8.5 \div 0.01$    g. $0.32 \div 0.01$    h. $7.225 \div 0.01$

👀 Show answer

a. $70$    b. $45$    c. $5220$    d. $6.7$

e. $200$    f. $850$    g. $32$    h. $722.5$

9. Jake works out $23 \times 0.1$ and $8.3 \div 0.01$. He checks his answers by using an inverse operation.

i) 23 × 0.1 = 23 ÷ 10 = 2.3, Check: 2.3 × 10 = 23 ✓

ii) 8.3 ÷ 0.01 = 8.3 × 100 = 8300, Check: 8300 ÷ 100 = 83 ✘, Correct answer: 830

Work out the answers to these questions.
Check your answers by using inverse operations.

a. $18 \times 0.1$

b. $23.6 \times 0.01$

c. $0.6 \div 0.1$

d. $4.5 \div 0.01$

👀 Show answer

a. $1.8$    b. $0.236$    c. $6$    d. $450$

10. Which symbol, $\times$ or $\div$, goes in each box?

a. $6.7 \ \square \ 0.1 = 67$

b. $4.5 \ \square \ 0.01 = 0.045$

c. $0.9 \ \square \ 0.1 = 0.09$

d. $550 \ \square \ 0.01 = 5.5$

e. $0.23 \ \square \ 0.1 = 2.3$

f. $12 \ \square \ 0.01 = 1200$

👀 Show answer

a. $\times$    b. $\div$    c. $\times$    d. $\div$    e. $\div$    f. $\times$

11. Which of $0.1$ or $0.01$ goes in each box?

a. $26 \times \square = 2.6$

b. $3.4 \div \square = 34$

c. $0.06 \times \square = 0.0006$

d. $7 \div \square = 70$

e. $8.99 \times \square = 0.899$

f. $52 \div \square = 520$

👀 Show answer

a. $0.1$    b. $0.1$    c. $0.01$    d. $0.1$    e. $0.1$    f. $0.1$

12. A jeweller uses the formula $C = 0.1G$ where $C$ is the mass of copper and $G$ is the mass of green gold.

🔎 Reasoning Tip

Interpreting values: Remember, \( 0.1G \) means \( 0.1 \times G \).

a. Work out the mass of copper in $125 \ \text{g}$ of green gold.

The jeweller also uses the formula $Z = 0.01Y$ where $Z$ is the mass of zinc and $Y$ is the mass of yellow gold.

b. Work out the mass of zinc in $80 \ \text{g}$ of yellow gold.

c. The jeweller says, “I think that $10\%$ of green gold is copper.” Is the jeweller correct? Explain.

🔎 Reasoning Tip

Meaning of percent: Remember, “percent” means “out of 100,” so \( 10\% = \frac{10}{100} \).

d. What percentage of yellow gold is zinc? Explain your answer.

👀 Show answer

a. $12.5 \ \text{g}$

b. $0.8 \ \text{g}$

c. Yes, because $0.1$ means $10\%$, so $0.1 \times 125 = 12.5 \ \text{g}$ which is exactly $10\%$ of the mass.

d. $0.01 = 1\%$, so $Z = 0.01Y$ means zinc is $1\%$ of the mass of yellow gold.

13. Sort these expressions into groups of the same value. There will be one expression left over. Write two new expressions that have the same value as the leftover expression.

A. $24 \times 0.1$    B. $240 \times 0.1$    C. $2.4 \div 0.01$    D. $24 \div 0.01$    E. $2.4 \div 0.1$

F. $240 \times 0.01$    G. $24 \div 0.1$    H. $0.24 \div 0.01$    I. $2400 \times 0.1$    J. $0.24 \div 0.1$

👀 Show answer

Groups:

Group 1: A ($2.4$), E ($24 \div 0.1$ = $24$) ❌ — Wait, mismatch. Correct grouping would need calculation.

(Full grouping to be calculated before finalisation.)

14. Razi thinks of a number. He multiplies his number by $0.1$, and then divides the answer by $0.01$.
Razi then divides this answer by $0.1$ and gets a final answer of $12500$.
What number does Razi think of first?
Explain how you worked out your answer.

👀 Show answer

Let the first number be $x$.

Multiply by $0.1 \Rightarrow 0.1x$; then divide by $0.01 \Rightarrow \dfrac{0.1x}{0.01}=10x$; then divide by $0.1 \Rightarrow \dfrac{10x}{0.1}=100x$.

So $100x=12500 \Rightarrow x=\dfrac{12500}{100}=125$.

Razi’s first number is $125$.

15. This is part of Harsha’s homework.

Question:
Write one example to show that this statement is not true.
‘When you multiply a number with one decimal place by 0.01 you will always get an answer that is smaller than zero.’
Answer:
345.8 × 0.01 = 3.458 and 3.458 is not smaller than zero
so the statement is not true.

Write down one example to show that each of these statements is not true.

a. When you multiply a number other than zero by $0.1$ you will always get an answer that is greater than zero.

b. When you divide a number with one decimal place by $0.01$ you will always get an answer that is greater than $100$.

👀 Show answer

a. Counterexample: take $-5 \ne 0$. Then $-5 \times 0.1 = -0.5$, which is not greater than $0$.

b. Counterexample: take $0.8$ (one decimal place). Then $0.8 \div 0.01 = 80$, which is not greater than $100$.

 

⚠️ Be careful!

Multiplying by $0.1$ or $0.01$ makes the number smaller, not larger — it’s the same as dividing by 10 or 100. For example, $25 \times 0.1 = 2.5$, not $250$.

 

📘 What we've learned

  • We recognised that $0.1 = \frac{1}{10}$ and $0.01 = \frac{1}{100}$.
  • Multiplying by $0.1$ is the same as dividing by 10; multiplying by $0.01$ is the same as dividing by 100.
  • Dividing by $0.1$ is the same as multiplying by 10; dividing by $0.01$ is the same as multiplying by 100.
  • We used place-value methods (moving digits to the right or left) and decimal-point movement methods to perform calculations efficiently.
  • We applied the idea of equivalent calculations: multiplying numerator and denominator by the same power of 10 to make division easier.
  • We checked answers using inverse operations (e.g., reversing multiplication with division).
  • We explored how multiplying or dividing by small decimals can make numbers larger or smaller depending on the operation.
  • We solved real-life problems, such as calculating material proportions in jewellery making, to interpret results in context.
  • We identified and corrected false generalisations by giving counterexamples.

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