Measurements Flashcards
Define a scalar quantity.
It is a physical quantity that has only a magnitude.
Define a vector quantity.
It is a physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction.
Define random error.
A random error is one that leads to measurements being scattered about a mean value with no fixed pattern.
Define systematic error.
A systematic error is one that leads to measurements being consistently higher or consistently lower than the true value.
Define accuracy.
Accuracy is the degree to which measurements approach the true value of the quantity being measured.
Define precision.
Precision is the degree of how close measurements of the same quantity are to each other.
To how many s.f should absolute uncertainty [𝚫x] , fractional/percentage uncertainty [𝚫x/x], and d.p for measured values be expressed?
absolute uncertainty [𝚫x]: 1 s.f
fractional/percentage uncertainty [𝚫x/x]: 1-2 s.f
measured value: same d.p as its absolute uncertainty
How do you estimate the uncertainty of a measured value?
Take X as the measured value, 𝚫X = ½ (Xmax - Xmin)
Define a homogeneous equation.
A homogenous equation is when both sides of an equation have the same resultant units.
Define an SI base unit.
SI base units are a selection of fundamental physical quantities, from which all other physical quantities can be represented as a combination of SI Base Units.
Define a derived unit.
Derived Units are defined as products or quotients of base units and are obtained as products of base units