Standard form is a way of making it easier to write very big and very small numbers. n (the power of 10) tells us the number of places to move the decimal point.
Example 1
To find the number that 3.7 x103 represents, we move the decimal point 3 spaces to the right: 3.7.... 37... 370 ... 3700.
E.g. 3.7 x103 represents 3700.
Example 2
To find the number that 5.3 x10-2 represents, we move the decimal point 2 spaces to the left: 5.3... 0.53... 0.053.
The number undergoing standard form notation must have a single digit before the decimal point. 11 x 103 is not the correct standard for notation. 1.1 x 104 would be correct