Chapter 2-Measurements&Calculations Flashcards
Quantitative observations
numerical
dependent variable
changes in response to the change the scientist makes to the independent variable
Qualitative observations
descriptions
independent variables
the one that is changed by the scientist
controls
these are held constant throughout the experiment to ensure that the independent variable is the only thing affecting the dependent variable
zeroes at the end of a number but to the left of a decimal point may or may not be _______ if a zero has not been measure or estimated but is just a placeholder, it is _________. a decimal point placed after zeroes indicates that they are _______.
significant
not significant
significant
zeroes appearing between nonzero digits are _______
significant
zeroes appearing in front of all nonzero digits are ______
not significant
significant figures
digits in a measurement that are known for certain, plus one uncertain digit
multiplying and dividing sigfigs
limit and round your answer to have as many total sigfigs as the factor with the least number of sigfigs
adding and subtracting sigfigs
limit and round your answer to the least number of decimal places in any of the numbers in the operation
rounding fives
a five with a non zero digit after it rounds up
a five with zeroes after it rounds even
exact numbers rule
numbers that are known to be exact do not affect the number of sigfigs in a calculation
ignore exact numbers and round your final answer to the number of sigfigs in the uncertain number
zeroes at the end of a number and to the right of a decimal point are ______
significant
Density = ?
mass
______
volume
when does density change?
when temperature changes. an increase in temperature equals a decrease in density
what is the density of liquid water?
1.00g/mL
water is less dense as a ____ than it is as a _______
solid
liquid
density is a(n)
/intensive//extensive/
property
intensive
precision
how close a set of measurements are to each other
accuracy
how close a measurement is to the correct or accepted value
experimental value
found through measurements and calculations in the lab
accepted value
“actual” value, tested many times and shown to be accurate
percent error
how far off your own measurement or calculation is from the correct value