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In this text, most numbers are assumed to have three significant figures. Furthermore, consistent numbers of significant figures are used in all worked examples. An answer given to three digits is based on input good to at least three digits, for example. If the input has fewer significant figures, the answer will also have fewer significant figures. Care is also taken that the number of significant figures is reasonable for the situation posed. In some topics, particularly in optics, more accurate numbers are needed and we use more than three significant figures. Finally, if a number is exact , such as the two in the formula for the circumference of a circle, C = 2π r , it does not affect the number of significant figures in a calculation. Likewise, conversion factors such as 100 cm/1 m are considered exact and do not affect the number of significant figures in a calculation.
Percent uncertainty |
(a) What is the relationship between the precision and the uncertainty of a measurement? (b) What is the relationship between the accuracy and the discrepancy of a measurement?
a. Uncertainty is a quantitative measure of precision. b. Discrepancy is a quantitative measure of accuracy.
Consider the equation 4000/400 = 10.0. Assuming the number of significant figures in the answer is correct, what can you say about the number of significant figures in 4000 and 400?
Suppose your bathroom scale reads your mass as 65 kg with a 3% uncertainty. What is the uncertainty in your mass (in kilograms)?
2 kg
A good-quality measuring tape can be off by 0.50 cm over a distance of 20 m. What is its percent uncertainty?
An infant’s pulse rate is measured to be 130 ± 5 beats/min. What is the percent uncertainty in this measurement?
4%
(a) Suppose that a person has an average heart rate of 72.0 beats/min. How many beats does he or she have in 2.0 years? (b) In 2.00 years? (c) In 2.000 years?
A can contains 375 mL of soda. How much is left after 308 mL is removed?
67 mL
State how many significant figures are proper in the results of the following calculations: (a) (b) (c)
(a) How many significant figures are in the numbers 99 and 100.? (b) If the uncertainty in each number is 1, what is the percent uncertainty in each? (c) Which is a more meaningful way to express the accuracy of these two numbers: significant figures or percent uncertainties?
a. The number 99 has 2 significant figures; 100. has 3 significant figures. b. 1.00%; c. percent uncertainties
(a) If your speedometer has an uncertainty of 2.0 km/h at a speed of 90 km/h, what is the percent uncertainty? (b) If it has the same percent uncertainty when it reads 60 km/h, what is the range of speeds you could be going?
(a) A person’s blood pressure is measured to be What is its percent uncertainty? (b) Assuming the same percent uncertainty, what is the uncertainty in a blood pressure measurement of 80 mm Hg?
a. 2%; b. 1 mm Hg
A person measures his or her heart rate by counting the number of beats in 30 s. If 40 ± 1 beats are counted in 30.0 ± 0.5 s, what is the heart rate and its uncertainty in beats per minute?
What is the area of a circle 3.102 cm in diameter?
7.557 cm 2
Determine the number of significant figures in the following measurements: (a) 0.0009, (b) 15,450.0, (c) 6×10 3 , (d) 87.990, and (e) 30.42.
Perform the following calculations and express your answer using the correct number of significant digits. (a) A woman has two bags weighing 13.5 lb and one bag with a weight of 10.2 lb. What is the total weight of the bags? (b) The force F on an object is equal to its mass m multiplied by its acceleration a . If a wagon with mass 55 kg accelerates at a rate of 0.0255 m/s 2 , what is the force on the wagon? (The unit of force is called the newton and it is expressed with the symbol N.)
a. 37.2 lb; because the number of bags is an exact value, it is not considered in the significant figures; b. 1.4 N; because the value 55 kg has only two significant figures, the final value must also contain two significant figures
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