Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes

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Presentation transcript:

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Accuracy vs Precision SI Units Lab Skills Prefixes Unit Conversion Significant figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

Base Unit Base Quantity Name Symbol Time t second s Length l metre m Mass m kilogram kg Temperature T kelvin K Electric Current I ampere A n mole Amount of Substance mol candela cd Luminous Intensity

Units of measurement SI units (metric) Length: meter (m) Ex: miles, feet, inches, hours, gallons, pounds, liters… SI units (metric) Length: meter (m) Time: second (s) Mass: kilogram (kg) Base Units (Other units derived from these) Volume: m3 Speed: ms-1 Power: (kg)(m2)s-3 = 1 Watt

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Accuracy vs Precision SI Units Lab Skills Prefixes Unit Conversion Significant figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

Prefixes

Prefix multipliers Power Prefix Symbol 1012 109 tera giga T G 106 mega 103 kilo k 10-3 milli m 10-6 micro  10-9 nano n 10-12 pico 

with appropriate prefix Awake? – covert to grams with appropriate prefix Power Prefix Symbol 1012 109 tera giga T G 106 mega M 103 kilo k 10-3 milli m 10-6 micro  10-9 nano n 10-12 pico 

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Accuracy vs Precision SI Units Lab Skills Prefixes Unit Conversion Significant figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

Significant Figures The number of significant figures expresses the precision of the measurement. Examples: 4 3456 2 2300 2 0.0045 2 5.0 x 105 3 1.04 0.00358 3 4 54.00

Fill in zeros up to but not after the decimal point. Spot quiz 49382 to 2 s.f. = 0.05961 to 1 s.f. = 374.582 to 3 s.f. = 0.0009317 to 2 s.f. = 49000 0.06 375 0.00093 Fill in zeros up to but not after the decimal point.

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Accuracy vs Precision SI Units Lab Skills Prefixes Unit Conversion Significant figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

Scientific notation A way of representing numbers that are very large or very small Distance from the Earth to the Sun: 150,000,000,000 m = 1.5 × 1011 m Diameter of an atom: 0.0000000001 m = 1.0 × 10-10 m = 0.1 nm Here’s the rule: Zeroes that only exist to separate other numbers from the decimal don’t count as significant figures.

The Scale of the universe

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Accuracy vs Precision SI Units Lab Skills Prefixes Unit Conversion Significant figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

Convert 572 centimetres to metres. Conversions Convert 572 centimetres to metres. Convert 80 km to metres

Convert 24 hours to seconds Conversions Convert 24 hours to seconds Show 50 km h-1 º 14 m s-1 Show 20 m s-1 º 72 km h-1

Lab Skills Physical Quantities Uncertainty SI Units Prefixes Improve? Accuracy: SI Units Precision: Lab Skills Random Systematic Prefixes Human Unit Conversion Significant Figures / Rounding Scientific Notation

how close the measurement is to the true value Accuracy: Precision: how many significant digits There will always be some error in a measured value. A measurement is only an estimate of the true value.

A gold coin is measured on a very accurate and precise scale to have a mass of 127.96458 grams. A second scale gives a reading of 128 grams. The second scale is accurate but not precise. A third scale gives a reading of 135.21568 grams. The third scale is precise but not accurate. A fourth scale gives a reading of 115 grams. The fourth scale is neither accurate nor precise.

Measurement / Experimental Errors Errors produced by unpredictable and unknown variations. Measurements are spread randomly around an average value. 1) Random: Errors that give results consistently above or below the true value, eg: 2) Systematic: Calibration error Zeroing error Parallax error Misreading of scales / instrument Bad maths / wrong equation used Transcription error 3) Human: Accuracy? Precision?

IMPROVING ACCURACY Observer and/or instrument placement - parallax error Use appropriate significant figures Beware of Zeroing / Calibration errors Average repeated measurements (ie for time data) Collect sufficient data (eg when looking for a relationship – need at least 5 lots of data)