1 / 14

Error or Uncertainty in Measurement

Error or Uncertainty in Measurement. All measurements have some uncertainty. Some measuring instruments have more uncertainty then others. How much water is in the beaker? 53 mL? 52.8 mL. 52.8mL is more accurate then 53mL but the .8 is uncertain. Significant Figures ( sigfigs ).

Télécharger la présentation

Error or Uncertainty in 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. Error or Uncertainty in Measurement

  2. All measurements have some uncertainty. Some measuring instruments have more uncertainty then others.

  3. How much water is in the beaker? 53 mL? 52.8 mL

  4. 52.8mL is more accurate then 53mL but the .8 is uncertain.

  5. Significant Figures (sigfigs) • Significant Figure – all certain digits plus one uncertain digit in a measurement. • Significant DOES NOT mean certain. • Only report significant figures. • What is significant?

  6. SigFig Rules • All non zero numbers are significant. • Ex: 3.45 has 3 sigfigs • Zeros between nonzero numbers are significant. • Ex: 20.34 has 4 sig figs • Ex: 40003 has 5 sigfigs • Zeros in front of nonzero numbers are NOT significant • Ex: 0.00045 has 2 sigfigs

  7. SigFig Rules • Zeros at the end of a number are only significant if there is a decimal point. • Ex: 85.00 has 4 sigfigs • Ex: 2000 has 1 sigfig • Ex: 2000. has 4 sigfigs

  8. How many significant figures are in the following numbers? 1. 0.038543 5 2. 2939011 7 3 3. 3950 8 4. 22878.000 2 5. 910 8 6. 0.048250100

  9. Rounding • When preforming a calculation involving measurements you must round correctly. • Your answer can only be as accurate as your least accurate measurement. • Rounding depends on whether you are adding/subtracting or multiplying/dividing.

  10. Rounding with Addition or Subtraction • Round to least number of decimal places • Ex: 25.1 g + 2.03 g = 27.13 round to 27.1 g • Ex: 5.44 m – 2.6103 m = 2.8297 round to 2.83 m

  11. Rounding with Multiplication or Division • Round to least number of sigfigs • Ex: 1.34 pm x 0.7488 pm = 1.003392 round to 1.00 pm • Ex: 6.52 ÷ 0.042 = 155.2380952 round to 160

  12. Complete the math problems using the right amount of significant figures 1720 7. 32.9 x 52.13 8. 335200 / 2.50 134000 9. 8480 – 57.24 8420 10. 638.940 + 0.072 639.012 11. 2869.0 x 0.057 160 12. 67.90 + 7.533045 75.43

  13. Rounding with Scientific Notation • M x 10n • Round the M part of the number only • 2.3456 x 1015 rounded to 3 sigfigs is 2.34 x 1015 • Round 56000 to 3 sigfigs • 5.60 x 104

  14. Rounding with Conversions • Conversion Factors are NOT measurements and do not effect rounding. • Always round to the same number of sigfigs you stat with. • Convert 45 cm to in. • 45 cm 1 in • 2.54 cm 17.7165354331 round to 2 Sigfigs for 18 in

More Related