Measurements & their errors Flashcards
accepted value
value of the most accurate measurement available, sometime referred to as the ‘true value’
accuracy
The closeness of a measurement to the true value (if known)
Base units
The units that define the SI system (e.g. the metre, the kilogram, the second, the ampere).
dependent variable
a physical quantity whose value depends on the value of another physical variable
differentiation
mathematical process of finding the gradient of a line from its equation.
error bar
representation of an uncertainty on a graph
independent variable
physical quantities whose values are selected or controlled by the experimenter
Integration
Mathematical process of finding the area under the curve from its mathematical equation
Limit of proportionality
The limits beyond which when a wire or a spring is stretched its extension is no longer proportional to the force that stretches it
linear
two quantities are said to have a linear relationship if the change of one quantity is proportional to the change of the other
linearity
an instrument that gives readings that are directly proportional to the magnitude of the quantity being measured
logarithmic scale
a scale such that equal intervals correspond to a change by a constant factor
mean value of a set of readings
sum of the readings divided by the number of readings
percentage uncertainty
=uncertainty/mean value x 100%
precision of a measurement
the degree of exactness of a measurement, usually expressed as the uncertainty of the readings used to obtain the measurement