1 / 14

Chapter 2 (p. 36-42)

Goal 1 : Develop abilities necessary to do and understand scientific inquiry. How Reliable are Measurements? Accuracy Precision Significant Figures. Chapter 2 (p. 36-42). Warm-up. Convert the following using dimensional analysis: 9.26 mm = _____ hm 0.089 mg = _____ kg

courtney
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 2 (p. 36-42)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Goal 1: Develop abilities necessary to do and understand scientific inquiry. • How Reliable are Measurements? • Accuracy • Precision • Significant Figures Chapter 2 (p. 36-42)

  2. Warm-up Convert the following using dimensional analysis: 9.26 mm = _____ hm 0.089 mg = _____ kg 4.5 x 1014 mL= _____ mL

  3. 1-Accuracy- closeness of measurement to accepted (correct) value 2-Precision- how close a set of measurements are to each other A. How reliable are measurements? game

  4. Accuracy vs. Precision

  5. Percent Error 3-Percent Error: • Measures the accuracy (how far off you are) of an experiment • Can have + or – value • + a little lower than accepted/- a little higher Accepted - Experimental x 100 Accepted Error__ x 100 Accepted go

  6. Example • Measured density from lab experiment is 1.40 g/mL. The correct density is 1.36 g/mL. • Find the percent error. go

  7. Answer What does the negative mean?

  8. B. Significant Figures • All known digits plus one estimated digit • Indicates precision

  9. Which is more precise? • 3.52 grams • 3.5 grams • 2 meters • 1.95 meters

  10. If there is a “decimal” present: • Start Pacific side: begin counting on the LEFT numbers 1-9, except leading zeros (any in between numbers are significant) • Ex: 0.002 3501 sec • 508.01 meters • 1.0200 x 105 kg Atlantic pacific rule for sig figs:

  11. If a decimal is absent in the number: • Start Atlantic side: begin counting on RIGHT with any number but zero (they don’t count); any zeros in between numbers 1-9 count • Example: 807 000 kg • 12 345 meters practice

  12. 1. 101.02 sec 2. 20.00 kg 3. 0.005 302 m/sec 4. 17 000 cm 5. 4320. 0 moles Practice-# of sig figs

  13. Need to use rounding to write a calculation correctly • When rounding, look at the digit after the one you can keep • Greater than or equal to 5, round up • Less than 5, keep the same Rounding

  14. Make the following have 3 sig figs: • 761.50  • 14.334  • 10789  • 203.514  Examples

More Related