56 Orders of Magnitude

Problem 17

How old were you when you were one million seconds old? (That’s 1,000,000.)

  • Before you figure it out, write down a guess. What’s your gut instinct? About a day? A week? A month? A year? Have you already reached that age? Or maybe you won’t live that long?
  • Now figure it out! When was / will be your million-second birthday?

 

Problem 18

How old were you when you were one billion seconds old?  (That’s 1,000,000,000.)

  • Again, before you figure it out, write down a guess.
  • Now figure it out! When was / will be your billion-second birthday?

Were you surprised by the answers? People (most people, anyway) tend to have a very good sense for small, everyday numbers, but have very bad instincts about big numbers. One problem is that we tend to think additively, as if one billion is about a million plus a million more (give or take). But we need to think mulitplicatively in situations like this.  One billion is 1,000 \times \text{ a million}.

So you could have just taken your answer to Problem 17 and multiplied it by 1,000 to get your answer to Problem 18. Of course, you would probably still need to do some calculations to make sense of the answer.

Think / Pair / Share

When is your one trillion second birthday? What will you do to celebrate?

 

Think / Pair / Share

The US debt is total amount the government has borrowed. (This borrowing covers the deficit — the difference between what the government spends and what it collects in taxes.) In summer of 2013, the US debt was  on the order of 10 trillion dollars. (That means more than 10 trillion but less than 100 trillion. If you were to write out the dots-and-boxes picture, the dots would be as far left as the 10,000,000,000 place.)

  • If the US pays back one penny every second, will the national debt be paid off in your lifetime? Explain your answer.
  • A headline from April 2013 said, “US to Pay Down $35 billion in Quarter 2.” Suppose the US pays down $35 billion dollars every quarter (so four times per year). About how many  years would it take to pay of the total national debt?

Here are some big-number problems to think about. Can you solve them?

Problem 19

  1. Suppose you have a million jelly beans, and you tile the floor with them. How big of an area will they cover? The classroom? A football field? Something bigger? What if it was a billion jelly beans?
  2. Suppose you have a million jelly beans and you stack them up. How tall would it be? As tall as you? As a tree? As a skyscraper? What if it was a billion jelly beans? About how many jelly beans (what order of magnitude) would you need to stack up to reach the moon? Explain your answers.

Fermi Problems

James Boswell wrote,

Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it.

But math proves this wrong. There is actually a third kind of knowledge: Knowledge that you figure out for yourself. In fact, this is what scientists and mathematicians do for a living: they create new knowledge! Starting with what is already known, they ask “what if…” questions. And eventually, they figure out something new, something no one ever knew before!

Even for knowledge that you could look up (or ask someone), you can often figure out the answer (or a close approximation to the answer) on your own. You need to use a little knowledge, and a little ingenuity.

Fermi problems, named for the physicist Enrico Fermi, involve using your knowledge, making educated guesses, and doing reasonable calculations to come up with an answer that might at first seem unanswerable.

Example

Here’s a classic Fermi problem: How many elementary school teachers are there in the state of Hawaii?

You might think: How could I possibly answer that? Why not just google it? (But some Fermi problems we meet will have — gasp! — non-googleable answers.)

First let’s define our terms. We’ll say that we care about classroom teachers (not administrators, supervisors, or other school personnel) who have a permanent position (not a sub, an aide, a resource room teacher, or a student teacher) in a grade K–5 classroom.

But let’s stop and think. Do you know the population of Hawaii? It’s about 1,000,000 people. (That’s not exact, of course. But this is an exercise is estimation. We’re trying to get at the order of magnitude of the answer.)

How many of those people are elementary school students? Well, what do you know about the population of Hawaii? Or what do you suspect is true? A reasonable guess would be that the population is evenly distributed across all age groups. That would give a population that looks something like this:

age range # of people
0 – 9 125,000
10 – 19 125,000
20 – 29 125,000
30 – 39 125,000
40 – 49 125,000
50 – 59 125,000
60 – 69 125,000
70 – 79 125,000

We’ll assume people don’t live past 80. Of course some people do! But we’re all about making simplifying assumptions right now. That gives us eight age categories, with about 125,000  people in each category.

An even better guess (since we have a large university that draws lots of students) is that there’s a “bump” around college age. And some people live past 80, but there are probably fewer people in the older age brackets. Maybe the breakdown is something like this? (If you have better guesses, use them!)

age range # of people
0 – 9 125,000
10 – 19 130,000
20 – 29 140,000
30 – 39 125,000
40 – 49 125,000
50 – 59 125,000
60 – 69 120,000
> 70 105,000

So, how many K–5 students are in Hawaii? That covers about six years of the 0–9 range. If we are still going with about the same number of people at each age, there should be about 12,500 in each grade for a total of 12,500\times 6 = 75,000 K–5 students.

OK, but we really wanted to know about K–5 teachers. One nice thing about elementary school: there tends to be just one teacher per class. So we need an estimate of how many classes, and that will tell us how many teachers.

So, how many students in each class? It probably varies a bit, with smaller kindergarten classes (since they are more rambunctious and need more attention), and larger fifth grade classes. There are also smaller classes in private schools and charter schools, but larger classes in public schools. A reasonable average might be 25 students per class across all grades K–5 and all schools.

So that makes 75,000 \div 25 = 3,000 K–5 classrooms in Hawaii. And that should be the same as the number of K–5 teachers.

How good is this estimate? Can you think of a way to check and find out for sure?

So now you see the process for tackling a Fermi problem:

  • Define your terms.
  • Write down what you know.
  • Make some reasonable guesses / estimates.
  • Do some simple calculations.

Try your hand at some of these:

Problem 20

How much money does your university earn in parking revenue each year?

 

Problem 21

How many tourists visit Waikiki in a year?

 

Problem 22

How much gas would be saved in Hawaii if one out of every ten people switched to a carpool?

 

Problem 23

How high can a climber go up a mountain on the energy in one chocolate bar?

 

Problem 24

How much pizza is consumed each month by students at your university?

 

Problem 25

How much would it cost to provide free day care to every four-year-old in the US?

 

Problem 26

How many books are in your university’s main library?

 

Problem 27

Make up your own Fermi problem… what would you be interested in calculating?  Then try to solve it!

 

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Mathematics for Elementary Teachers Copyright © 2018 by Michelle Manes is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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