Your Handy Checklist For Practical Work: The Experiment He Experiment
Your Handy Checklist For Practical Work: The Experiment He Experiment
The experiment he
1 Taking readings
Repeat all readings and average. Show all readings. If timing, measure the period of at least ve oscillations each time. Try for ten if time allows. Remember, timing uncertainty is 0.1 s with a hand-held stopclock. When taking a set of readings make sure that they cover the whole range of the readings fairly evenly. y On tables and graphs the label is ln ( y/m) or log10 ( y/m) to show the unit of y as metres, Check that you know how to use logs.
6 Checking relationships
When checking, state what should be constant, perform the calculation and then state whether the constant was found and whether the relationship is veried. You may want to refer to the uncertainty. y y proportional to x x should be constant. y proportional to 1 x y proportional to ex y x should be constant. y decreases by same factor if x increases by equal amounts.
Uncertainties
Graphs can be plotted with each point having error bars on the x-axis and the y-axis to show the expected absolute uncertainties. The worst acceptable line should be drawn as a dotted line or labelled as worst acceptable line; it should be the steepest or shallowest line that goes through the error bars of all the points. If this is not possible because of one point that point may be anomalous. Check it it may be wrong.
3 The graph
Label each axis of the graph with both quantity and unit. Make sure your graph occupies at least 5 7 squares (i.e. half the paper) with your plotted points. Ask yourself whether the origin should be plotted. Do not use an awkward scale, i.e. 1 square = 3, 7, 9 units. Plot points neatly, with no large blobs, or crosses. Circle your points if you plot them as dots. The line you draw should be clear, thin and even.
Combining uncertainties
There are absolute uncertainties and percentage uncertainties know the dierence.
When adding or subtracting quantities, add absolute uncertainties. When multiplying or dividing quantities, add percentage uncertainties to get the percentage uncertainty in the answer.
Worked examples
Suppose two measurements have values A = 2.34 0.02 and B = 6.0 0.1 (Notice that the values are quoted to the number of decimal places justied by the uncertainty. Uncertainties are only themselves usually accurate to no better than 1 signicant g so giving more than 2 signicant gures is meaningless.) What are the uncertainties in A + B, B A, B A and B A? Adding and subtracting: A + B = 8.34 0.12 = 8.3 0.1 B A = 3.64 0.12 = 3.6 0.1 Dividing: B = 2.56 A % uncertainty in B = % uncertainty in A A + % uncertainty in B = 1 + 1.5 = 2.5%
B A = 14.04 As when dividing, the percentage uncertainty in B A is again 2.5%. This gives: actual uncertainty in B A = 14.04 2.5 = 0.4 100 B A = 14.0 0.4