Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

LECTURER PROF.Dr. DEMIR BAYKA AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING LABORATORY I.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "LECTURER PROF.Dr. DEMIR BAYKA AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING LABORATORY I."— Presentation transcript:

1 LECTURER PROF.Dr. DEMIR BAYKA AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING LABORATORY I

2 UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS ERROR IT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE MEASURED AND TRUE VALUE THE TRUE VALUE MUST BE KNOWN IN ORDER TO CALCULATE THE ERROR

3 UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS SINCE THE TRUE VALUE IS UNKNOWN UNCERTAINTY UNCERTAINTY IS THE ESTIMATED ERROR IT IS WHAT WE THINK THE ERROR IS

4 PRECISION ERROR IT IS PRESENT WHEN SUCCESSIVE MEASUREMENTS OF AN UNCHANGED QUANTITY YIELDS NUMERICALLY DIFFERENT VALUES UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

5 ACCURACY ERROR IT IS PRESENT WHEN THE NUMERICAL AVERAGE OF SUCCESSIVE READINGS DEVIATES FROM THE KNOWN CORRECT READING UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

6 ACCURACY ERRORS MAY BE CORRECTED (FOR EXAMPLE BY CALIBRATION) PRECISION ERRORS HAVE TO BE CALCULATED IN A STATISTICAL MANNER UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

7 WHEN A MEASURED QUANTITY ( X ) IS UNCERTAIN THEN THE RESULT IS PRESENTED IN THE FOLLOWING MANNER : UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

8 IF A MEASUREMENT OF A PHYSICAL QUANTITY IS EXPRESSED WITHOUT ANY UNCERTAINTY THE UNCERTAINTY IS DEDUCED FROM THE SIGNIFICANT FIGURES UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

9 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES THE NUMBER OF FIGURES USED IN EXPRESSING THE RESULTS OF A MEASUREMENT IS AN INDICATION OF THE ACCURACY OF THAT MEASUREMENT UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS

10 EXAMPLE IF THE MASS OF AN OBJECT IS SPECIFIED AS 12 Kg m = 12 kg THEN THE TRUE VALUE IS ESTIMATED TO BE CLOSER TO 12 kg THAN TO 11 kg OR 13 kg

11 IF THE SAME MASS WAS MEASURED BY A MORE ACCURATE SCALE AS : m = 12.0 kg THEN ITS TRUE VALUE IS ESTIMATED TO BE CLOSER TO 12.0 kg THAN TO 12.1 kg OR 11.9 kg

12 THERE ARE 2 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES m = 12 kg IN m = 12.0 kg IN THERE ARE 3 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES

13 FOR WHOLE NUMBERS THE SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ARE CONSIDERED TO BE INFINITE FOR EXAMPLE IN THE FORMULA THE 2 IN THE DENOMINATOR IS CONSIDERED TO BE EXACT (==> 2.0000000…..)

14 FOR 1.TRAILING ZEROES E.g. 600 OR 100000 OR 120 2.LEADING ZEROES E.g. 0.06 OR 0.0001 OR 0.12 TOTAL NUMBER OF DIGITS MAY NOT ALWAYS CORRESPOND TO NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES

15 IN ORDER TO CLEARLY EXPRESS THE NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES USE SCIENTIFIC NOTATION FOR EXAMPLE INSTEAD OF X = 2300 X = 2.3 x 10 3 ( 2 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES) X = 2.30 x 10 3 ( 3 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES) X = 2.300 x 10 3 ( 4 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES)

16 IF ONLY SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ARE USED TO EXPRESS THE MEASURE OF A QUANTITY THE UNCERTAINTY IS IN THE LEAST SIGNIFICANT DIGIT

17 IF THE UNCERTAINTY IN THE MEASURE OF A QUANTITY IS OTHER THAN THE LEAST SIGNIFICANT DIGIT THEN IT IS EXPLICITLY EXPRESSED AS : *ABSOLUTEUNCERTAINTY *RELATIVEUNCERTAINTY

18 COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION RESULT IS EXPRESSED WITH AN ACCURACY EQUAL TO THE ACCURACY OF THE LEAST ACCURATE NUMBER.

19 COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION for example

20 COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION for example

21 COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION for example

22 COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION RESULT IS EXPRESSED WITH AN ACCURACY EQUAL TO OR LESS THAN THE ACCURACY OF THE LEAST ACCURATE NUMBER.

23 for example COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION

24 for example COMPUTATIONS OF NUMBERS HAVING UNEQUAL NUMBER OF SIGNIFICANT FIGURES MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION

25 COMBINATION OF UNCERTAINTIES AS WELL AS ADDITION, SUBTRACTION, MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION THERE WILL ALSO BE CASES WHERE POWERS OF VARIABLES WILL BE COMBINED TO OBTAIN A RESULT.

26 COMBINATION OF UNCERTAINTIES THE UNCERTAINTY OF THE RESULT WILL DEPEND : *ON THE UNCERTAINTITIES OF THE INDIVIDUAL MEASURED QUANTITIES *ON HOW THESE QUANTITIES ARE COMBINED

27 COMBINATION OF UNCERTAINTIES IN GENERAL IF RESULT Q IS A FUNCTION OF MORE THAN ONE VARIABLE x i THEN THE EXPECTED VALUE Q WILL BE CALCULATED THROUGH THE EXPECTED VALUES OF THE AFFECTING VARIABLES x i AND WILL HAVE AN OVERALL UNCERTAINTY

28 COMBINATION OF UNCERTAINTIES WILL BE DEPENDENT ON AND ON HOW MUCH EACH AFFECTS i.e.

29 BY ADDING THE SQUARES OF RELATIVE UNCERTAINTY EFFECT OF EACH VARIABLE AND THEN TAKING THE SQUARE ROOT OF THE SUM WE ARE CONSIDERING THE EFFECT OF EACH VARIABLE IRRESPECTIVE OF ITS TREND

30 THE VARIABLES ( x i ) ARE ASSUMED TO BE INDEPENDENT

31 WE MAY CONSIDER AS WEIGHING FACTORS THAT DETERMINE THE RELATIVE EFFECTS OF ON

32 EXAMPLE V1V1 V2V2 R

33 V1V1 V2V2 R EXPECTED VALUE IT IS POSSIBLE THAT

34 V1V1 V2V2 R WOULD GIVE US

35 V1V1 V2V2 R HOWEVER WE ARE LESS CERTAIN OF BOTH * THE MEASURED VOLTAGE AND * THE MEASURED OR ACCEPTED RESISTANCE

36 THEREFORE FOR

37

38 THEREFORE

39 EXAMPLE

40

41

42

43 Carbon dioxide is pumped into a cylinder. The pressure and temperature of the gas is measured after they have reached stable values. Find the mass of the gas with its uncertainty. Measured data : D = 20 cm±0.1 cm H = 100 cm±0.5 cm P = 100 atm±1 atm T = 20 C±0.1 C

44 Given D = 20 cm± 0.1 cm H = 100 cm± 0.5 cm P = 100 atm± 1 atm T = 20 C± 0.1 C Required m = ?  m = ? Solution

45

46

47

48

49


Download ppt "LECTURER PROF.Dr. DEMIR BAYKA AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING LABORATORY I."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google