Lecture_2_-_sig_figs__dimensional_analysis
Chapter R: Uncertainty in Measurements, Significant Figures, and Dimensional Analysis
Course Guidelines
Office Hours
Uncertainty in Calculation
Example problem:
Mass of porcelain spoon = 12.4303 g
Initial water volume = 68.0 mL, final volume = 73.1 mL
Density calculation: Density = mass/volume(5.1 mL).
Measurement Fundamentals
Measurements must include both a number and a unit.
All measurements have associated uncertainties (assumed ±1 in last digit).
Precision: Closeness of measurements to each other.
Accuracy: Closeness to true or accepted value.
Fundamental SI Units
Mass: kg
Length: m
Time: s
Temperature: K
Electric current: A
Amount of substance: mol
Luminous intensity: cd
SI System Prefixes
Significant Figures
Reflects measurement uncertainty.
More digits = less relative uncertainty.
Rules for counting:
Nonzero integers are significant.
Leading zeros are not significant.
Trailing zeros are significant if there's a decimal.
Exact numbers (e.g., definitions) have infinite significant figures.
Significant Figures in Calculations
Dimensional Analysis
Focuses on unit cancellation in calculations.
Uses unit factors for conversions, e.g., 1 in = 2.54 cm.
Example Problems
Density problem with pennies (15 lb total, density 7.17 g/cm³).
Floating/Sinking calculation for a 5.25 oz ball with diameter 2.9 in.