1 / 34

Chapter 11: Measurement

Chapter 11: Measurement. Section 11.1: Fundamentals of Measurement. See Activity 11A regarding Measurable Attributes. Structure of Measures. Create an order (taller vs shorter, heavier vs lighter) Some are additive Ex’s: length, weight, time Non-Ex’s : temperature, density. Definitions.

esben
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 11: Measurement

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. Chapter 11: Measurement Section 11.1: Fundamentals of Measurement

  2. See Activity 11A regarding Measurable Attributes

  3. Structure of Measures • Create an order (taller vs shorter, heavier vs lighter) • Some are additive • Ex’s: length, weight, time • Non-Ex’s: temperature, density

  4. Definitions • Def:unit- a reference amount for a given quantity • Def: To measure a quantity- to compare that quantity with a unit of the quantity

  5. Units What makes a particular measurement a good choice as a unit? • Precise, standardized definition • Easy to convert to other units • Easily measurable Some bad units: • Steps or paces • Square miles if measuring the size of a room

  6. Another bad unit • Lordes

  7. Standard U.S. System Units

  8. Deciding on which unit to use Ex: Which unit would you use to measure the following? • The area of this classroom • The weight of a pencil • The length of a basketball court • The volume of a water bottle • The volume of a textbook

  9. The Units for the Metric System

  10. Metric System Prefixes

  11. Definitions of metric units • meter- originally defined as the length of a pendulum whose half-period is exactly 1 second, or as 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the North Pole • cc- cubic centimeter, used for dosages • metric ton- 1000 kilograms

  12. Important relationships among metric units • 1 milliliter of water weighs 1 gram • No easy comparison for number of ounces a fluid ounce of water weighs • 1 milliliter of liquid fills a 1 cubic centimeter container • No easy comparison for fluid ounces and cubic inches

  13. Converting between U.S. and metric systems • Length: 1 inch = 2.54 cm • Capacity: 1 gallon ≈ 3.79 liters • Weight/mass: 1 kg ≈ 2.2 pounds

  14. Measuring Length • How do we measure length? Line units up end to end and count how many units make up the quantity’s length • What if the object isn’t straight? Run a string along the object or surface then measure the string’s length when it is straightened out

  15. Section 11.2: Length, Area, Volume, and Dimension

  16. Length • Def:Length- describes the size of something that is one-dimensional - equal to the number of a chosen unit of length that it takes to cover the object without gaps or overlaps • Def:one-dimensional- an object where at each point, there is only one independent direction to move within the object • Ex’s: line segment outer edge of a circle or polygon curved line equator of the Earth imaginary line from one end of a 2 or 3-dimensional object to the other end

  17. Perimeter • Def: The perimeter is the “distance around a shape,” or the length of the outer edge of a shape. • Ex 1: How many feet of baseboard do you need to go around the following room? Assume each square in the grid is 1 square foot.

  18. Perimeter • Def: The perimeter is the “distance around a shape,” or the length of the outer edge of a shape. • Ex 1: How many feet of baseboard do you need to go around the following room?

  19. Area • Def:Area- describes the size of a two-dimensional object - equal to the number of a chosen unit of area that it takes to cover the object without gaps or overlaps • Def:2-dimensional- at each point, there are 2 independent directions to go within the object • Ex’s: coordinate plane inside of a circle or polygon piece of paper surface of a box land surface of the Earth

  20. Example Area Problem • Ex 2: How many square feet of carpet do you need to cover the floor of the following room?

  21. Example Area Problem • Ex 2: How many square feet of carpet do you need to cover the floor of the following room?

  22. Volume • Def:Volume- describes the size of a 3-dimensional object - equal to the number of a chosen unit of volume that it takes to fill the object without gaps or overlap • Def:3-dimensional- at each point, there are 3 independent directions to go within the object • Ex’s: atmosphere inside of a balloon or box water in a container the Earth

  23. Example Volume Problem • Ex 3: How many cubic feet of air is in the following room if the flat ceiling is 10 feet from the floor?

  24. Section 11.3: Error and Precision in Measurements

  25. Example Error Problem • Ex 1: If a car company lists its sedan as weighing 3110 lbs, what could the car’s actual weight be?

  26. Another Example Problem • Ex 2: If Colorado is reported to be 380 miles wide and 280 miles long, how large can the error be if the area is reported as 106,400 square miles?

  27. Section 11.4: Converting Between Units of Measurement

  28. Converting Units • Ex 1: A scale measures a dog’s weight to be 356 ounces. How many pounds does the dog weigh? (Recall that )

  29. Converting Units • Def: Dimensional Analysis: process for converting between units by multiplying the number 1 expressed as a fraction that relates two units • Ex 2: How many miles are in 5 kilometers? (Recall that )

  30. See practice problems on Activity 11G

  31. Converting Units of Area and Volume • Ex 3:Paulene is making a quilt which is made with patterned squares of size How many square pieces does she need to sew together to make the quilt?

  32. See more practice problems in Activity 11I

  33. Approximate Conversions

  34. Using Approximate Conversions • Ex 4: Gas in England is currently and in the U.S. it is per gallon. In which country is gas cheaper?

More Related