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Significant Figures.

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Presentation on theme: "Significant Figures."— Presentation transcript:

1 Significant Figures

2 What is a significant figure?
There are 2 kinds of numbers: Exact: the amount of money in your account. Known with certainty.

3 What is a significant figure?
Approximate: weight, height—anything MEASURED. No measurement is perfect.

4 When to use Significant figures
When a measurement is recorded only those digits that are dependable are written down.

5 When to use Significant figures
If you measured the width of a paper with your ruler you might record 21.7cm. To a mathematician , or is the same.

6 But, to a scientist 21.7cm and 21.70cm is NOT the same
21.700cm to a scientist means the measurement is accurate to within one thousandth of a cm.

7 How do I know how many Sig Figs?
Rule: Any non-zero numbers will ALWAYS be significant.

8 How do I know how many Sig Figs?
Rule: In whole numbers that end in zero, the zeros at the end are not significant.

9 How many sig figs? 7 40 0.5 7 x 105 7,000,000 1

10 How do I know how many Sig Figs?
Rule: If zeros are sandwiched between non-zero numbers, the zeros become significant.

11 How do I know how many Sig Figs?
Rule: If zeros are at the end of a number that has a decimal, the zeros are significant. These are called trailing zeroes. If zeroes are at the beginning of a number (numbers less than 1), the zeroes are said to be insignificant. These are called leading zeroes.

12 How many sig figs here? 1.2 204 56.76 4.00 0.0792 7,083,000,000 2 3 4

13 How many sig figs here? 3401 2100 2100.0 5.00 8,000,050,000 4 2 5 3 6

14 What about calculations with sig figs?
Rule: When adding or subtracting measured numbers, the answer can have no more places after the decimal than the LEAST of the measured numbers.

15 Add/Subtract examples
2.45cm + 1.2cm = 3.65cm, Round off to = 3.7cm 7.432cm + 2cm = 9.432

16 Multiplication and Division
Rule: When multiplying or dividing, the result can have no more significant figures than the least reliable measurement.

17 A couple of examples Round to 730 75.8cm x 9.6 cm = 727.68 cm2


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