Cruise around to as many of the Measurement Stations as you can in 5 minutes For each, the answer is on the back Note: Your measurement may vary, but you.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 2 – Scientific Measurement
Advertisements

SECTION 2-3. Objectives 1. Distinguish between accuracy and precision 2. Determine the number of significant figures in measurements 3. Perform mathematical.
Calculating Uncertainties
Significant Figures Every measurement has a limit on its accuracy based on the properties of the instrument used. we must indicate the precision of the.
Physics Rules for using Significant Figures. Rules for Averaging Trials Determine the average of the trials using a calculator Determine the uncertainty.
Using Scientific Measurements.
Measurements: Every measurement has UNITS.
Mr. Doerksen Chemistry 20. Accuracy and Precision  It is important to note that accuracy and precision are NOT the same thing.  Data can be very accurate,
Significant Figures, and Scientific Notation
Advanced Placement Chemistry Significant Figures Review AP Chemistry
Topic 11: Measurement and Data Processing
IB Chemistry Chapter 11, Measurement & Data Processing Mr. Pruett
Making Measurements and Using Numbers The guide to lab calculations.
1.07 Accuracy and Precision
Objectives: * 1. Define significant digits. * 2. Explain how to determine which digits in measurement are significant. * 3. Convert measurements in to.
Topic 11: Measurement and Data Processing
Data analysis (chapter 2) SI units and the metric system ▫Base units  Time (sec)  Length (m)  Mass (kg)  Temperature (Kelvin)  Derived base units.
Uncertainty and Error (11.1)  error in a measurement refers to the degree of fluctuation in a measurement  types systematic error ○ measurements are.
Accuracy: The closeness of a measurement to the true or actual value
Uncertainty and Error (11.1)  error in a measurement refers to the degree of fluctuation in a measurement  types systematic error ○ measurements are.
Measurements: Every measurement has UNITS.
SIGNIFICANT FIGURES. Significant Figure Rules There are three rules on determining how many significant figures are in a number: Non-zero digits are always.
Calculating Uncertainties
Reliability of Measurements Chapter 2.3. Objectives  I can define and compare accuracy and precision.  I can calculate percent error to describe the.
Significant Figure Notes With scientific notation too.
Chapter 2 Section 3 Using Scientific Measurements.
Scientific Measurement Ch. 3. Scientific Notation 3-1.
Propagation of Uncertainty in Calculations -Uses uncertainty (or precision) of each measurement, arising from limitations of measuring devices. - The importance.
Significant Figures Density % Error. Significant Figures  The number of digits reported in a measurement.  All the known digits plus one estimated value.
Significant Figures When using calculators we must determine the correct answer. Calculators are ignorant boxes of switches and don’t know the correct.
Accuracy vs. Precision Measurements need to accurate & precise. Accurate -(correct) the measurement is close to the true value. Precise –(reproducible)
Warm-up: Are these “errors”? 1. Misreading the scale on a triple-beam balance 2. Incorrectly transferring data from your rough data table to the final,
Data  Qualitative (don’t forget this in all labs) non-numerical information obtained from observations, not from measurement  Quantitative numerical.
Significant Figures SPH3U. Precision: How well a group of measurements made of the same object, under the same conditions, actually agree with one another.
Mastery of Significant Figures, Scientific Notation and Calculations Goal: Students will demonstrate success in identifying the number of significant figures.
Data Analysis Applying Mathematical Concepts to Chemistry.
Measurement and Data Processing Topic 11.1 & 11.2 (not 11.3)
Measurement Unit Unit Description: In this unit we will focus on the mathematical tools we use in science, especially chemistry – the metric system and.
Significant Figures. Rule 1: Digits other than zero are significant 96 g = 2 Sig Figs 152 g = __________ Sig Figs 61.4 g = 3 Sig Figs g = __________.
CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 2, SECTION 3. USING SCIENTIFIC MEASUREMENTS Accuracy and Precision Accuracy refers to the closeness of measurements to the correct or.
Objectives: * 1. Define significant digits. * 2. Explain how to determine which digits in measurement are significant. * 3. Convert measurements in to.
Measurement & Data Processing IB Chem. Objective: demonstrate knowledge of measurement & data processing. Warm up: Explain the difference between accuracy.
Units of Measurement SI units (Systeme Internationale d’Unites) were developed so that scientists could duplicate and communicate their work. Base UnitsDerived.
Accuracy, Precision and Significant Figures. Scientific Measurements All of the numbers of your certain of plus one more. –Here it would be 4.7x. –We.
Scientific Measurement Chapter 3. Not just numbers Scientists express values that are obtained in the lab. In the lab we use balances, thermometers, and.
Significant Figures. Rule 1: Nonzero numbers are always significant. Ex.) 72.3 has 3 sig figs.
Chemistry Using and Expressing Measurements Section 3.1.
Accuracy and Precision Measurements Significant Figures (Sig Figs)
Topic 11 Measurement and data processing
Measurement Guidelines
Significant Figures.
Calculating Uncertainties
Lesson 2 – Sci. Notation, Accuracy, and Significant Figures
Introduction to Chemistry Part 2
GHS Enriched Chemistry Chapter 2, Section 3
Significant Figures
Scientific Measurement
measurement and data processing Topic 11.1 & 11.2 (not 11.3)
Lesson 2 – Sci. Notation, Accuracy, and Significant Figures
measurement and data processing Topic 11.1 & 11.2 (not 11.3)
Measurement Unit Unit Description:
Accuracy and Precision
Significant Figures, and Scientific Notation
Measurement Unit Unit Description:
Topic 11: Measurement and Data Processing
Lesson 2 – Sci. Notation, Accuracy, and Significant Figures
Chemistry Measurement Notes
Which of these numbers has the most significant figures E 5
Uncertainty in Measurement
Lab Skills Intro.
Presentation transcript:

Cruise around to as many of the Measurement Stations as you can in 5 minutes For each, the answer is on the back Note: Your measurement may vary, but you should have the same # of decimal places recorded and the same +/- as I do Warm-up

How to find the +/- uncertainty of measured and calculated values IB Chemistry Uncertainties

How many candies are in this jar? Do this… Make a guess Compare with 3 others Make a quick bar graph of your 3 guesses and the average Display graph on the blackboard Which group had the highest precision? Precision= ability of a measurement to be consistently reproduced Which had the highest accuracy? Accuracy= a measurements correctness

Significant Figures Since you work hard to be accurate, it’s important that you show off just how careful you were with your measurements. Examples: 76.0cm cm cm 3

Significant Figures Significant Figures are values that have been measured (and deserve respect) 1.98 = 3 sig figsNumbers are significant 2 = 1 sig fig 2.05 = 3 sig figsZeros are sig. if between numbers 2.00 = 3 sig figsZeros are sig. if behind decimal = 1 sig fig … and not at the beginning 2000 = 1 sig fig (but, = 4 sig figs)Zeros at the end are not significant x 10 3 = 4 sig figsEverything is sig. in scientific notation Adding and subtracting- keep the same # of digits after the decimal as the value with the least #s after decimal. Ex: = = 2.7 Multiplying and Dividing- keep the same # of sig figs as the value with the least Ex: x = = Note: Just worry about these at the end and they’re really not too bad.

What is “Uncertainty”? Every time we measure a value, there’s a certain point where we (or the instrument that we’re using) have to estimate or round So, no measurement is absolutely perfect The imperfectness is the uncertainty This can be expressed with a ± value at the end Example: 2.5cm ± 0.5 means that the actual value is 2.0 – cm ± 0.05 means The second value is more precise (note: uncertainties only have 1 significant figure)

Finding Uncertainty- Measured Analog equipment: ± HALF of the increment on the instrument, but you could use your judgment here, with a short justification statement Ex: 76.0cm 3 ± 0.5 (or even 76.0cm 3 ± 0.2 with justification) Ex: 6.55cm 3 ± 0.05 Digital equipment: ± WHOLE last digit measured Ex: 1.25g ± 0.01g Ex: pH= 6.5 ± 0.1

Try some… Measuring mass on a digital balance: 0.34g g Measuring temperature with digital thermometer: 24 o C 19.6 o C Measuring temp with a manual thermometer: 14.5 o C Measuring volume with a burette: 34.5cm 3 ± 0.01 ± ± 1 ± 0.1 ± 0.5

Finding Uncertainty- Calculated I (Propagation of Error) Adding and Subtracting: Add uncertainties of all values used Ex: Volume change = ± 0.05 cm 3 – ± 0.05 cm 3 Could be as small as – = Could be as large as – = So… = ± 0.1 Ex #2: Mass change = 0.8 ± 0.1 g – 0.7 ± 0.1 g = 0.1 ± 0.2 Averaging: Half of the range of values averaged, or the ±, whichever is bigger Ex: average these values: 3.4, 2.6, 3.2 (all ± 0.1) 3.1 ± Uncertainties ALWAYS have only 1 significant figure

Try Some- Addition/Subtraction (45 ± 1)+(23 ± 1) = (0.9 ± 0.1)+(0.8 ± 0.1)–(0.5 ± 0.1) = Average: 9.1 ± 0.1, 9.5 ± 0.1, and 9.2 ± 0.1 = 68 ± ± ± 0.2

Finding Uncertainty- Calculated II Multiplying and Dividing Convert all uncertainties into percents Add the percents Convert the percent back into an absolute uncertainty Ex: Density = (4.5g ± 0.1)/(9cm 3 ± 1) 0.1 is 2.2% of is 11.1% of 9 Density = 0.5g/cm 3 ± 13.3% 13.3% of 0.5 is 0.07 Answer… Density = 0.5 ± 0.07 Don’t forget significant figures at the end

Try Some– Multiplication/Division Rate = (23.9m ± 0.1)/(134sec ± 1) % Water = (0.049g ± 0.001)/(0.092 ± 0.001) 0.1 = 0.42%, 1 = 0.75% Rate = 0.178m/sec ± 1.17% Rate = 0.178m/sec ± = 2.0%, = 1.1% % Water = 53% ± 3.1% of 53 % Water = 53% ± 2

A Quickie Way Usually, the range of your data is much larger than the propagated uncertainty Calculate the final value using your trials, average your trials and then add a ± using ½ of the range to your final answer… This could save you a lot of converting to percents…. blah blah blah along the way Example:

Example– Quickie way 3 values are calculated using the cumbersome % method: ± ± ± 0.03 Average= Uncertainty is half of the range or the uncertainty of the value whichever is larger The range is = 3.04 half of which is 1.52 or 2 with one sig fig 2 is huge compared to the uncertainties of the values, so why did you bother with all that mess? Just skip it! Answer = ± 2