Errors and Their Propagation

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Errors and their Propagation

What is error/uncertainty?
As it may sound, error does not necessarily mean the mistake made by the experimenter.
There is, in fact, always a limitation as to how precise or exact a measurement can be. There
will always be an uncertainty associated with a measured quantity (error and uncertainty
basically mean the same thing). Therefore, we need to consider those errors in our
experiment to deduce a reasonable conclusion.

An uncertainty in a quantity x is denoted by ∆x or 𝛿x.

Types of errors on the basis of origin:


1. Errors in Direct Measurements
When you measure something directly, like distance and time with a measuring scale
and stopwatch, there is some uncertainty due to the precision of the measuring
device. Generally, the uncertainty in a direct measurement is half the value of Least
Count (L.C.) of the measuring instrument.
∆x = L.C.

2. Errors in Indirect Measurements


When you measure something by measuring something else, like measuring velocity
by using the distance and time measured directly, it is indirect measurement.
The errors in directly measured quantities lead to errors in the indirectly
measured quantity too. This is called error propagation, and it is very important to
know how these errors propagate in a calculation.

Rules of Error Propagation:


Before knowing the rules of error propagation, keep in mind that
 uncertainty is rounded to one significant figure,
 the best estimate and uncertainty must always have the same number of digits after
the decimal point, and
 you should not round in between calculation of error – keep some more significant
figures until you find the error.
eg: (2 ± 0.01) cm and (3.00 ± 1) cm are incorrect as the number of digits after the decimal
point of the quantity and its uncertainty do not match. (5.10 ± 0.20) cm is incorrect as the
uncertainty has two significant figures – its correct form is (5.1 ± 0.2) cm.
Prepared by Prabhakar Kafle and Sanam Limbu.
If you have any queries or suggestions, please contact [email protected] or [email protected].
Rules:
 In addition or subtraction, the errors “always add.”
If z = w + x – y, and ∆w, ∆x, and ∆y are the uncertainties in w, x, and y, then the
uncertainty in z is,
∆z = ∆w + ∆x + ∆y

eg: w = (4.52 ± 0.02) cm, x = (2.0 ± 0.2) cm, y = (3.0 ± 0.6) cm. Find z = x + y – w
and its uncertainty.
z = x + y – w = 2.0 + 3.0 – 4.52 = 0.48 cm
z = x + y + w = 0.2 + 0.6 + 0.02 = 0.82 ≃ 0.8 cm.
The final answer, after rounding, is (0.5 ± 0.8) cm.

 When we divide or multiply two measured quantities x and y, the fractional


uncertainty in the answer is the sum of the fractional uncertainties in x and y.
If z = xy or z = x/y,
  
= +

Note: It is necessary to take the absolute value as a negative value might reduce the
uncertainty, but uncertainties are always added.

eg: The masses of two bodies are m1 = (2.4 ± 0.2) kg and m2 = (1.0 ± 0.1) kg.
Calculate their reduced mass, µ = , and its uncertainty.

. .
µ= = 0.706 kg (one more significant digit is kept)
. .

First, fractional uncertainty in the numerator is


   . .
= + = = 0.183
. .

Second, fractional uncertainty in the denominator is


   . .
= = = 0.088
. .

  
Now, = + = 0.183 + 0.088 = 0.271

  = 0.706 × 0.271 = 0.19 kg ≃ 0.2 kg (rounded to one significant figure)


Thus, the final answer is (0.7 ± 0.2) kg.

Prepared by Prabhakar Kafle and Sanam Limbu.


If you have any queries or suggestions, please contact [email protected] or [email protected].
 If z = xm yn or xm/yn,
  
= |m| + |n|

 If z = ax, where a is an exact number like G, NA, kB, R, or ⌅,


z = a x

In general, the uncertainty of a function can be found by taking its derivative, except that the
negative terms are made positive.

eg: If z = , =
= =
  
So, after changing the negative sign to positive, = +

Some more examples:

 If z = √ , = d(x2 + y2)1/2 = (x2 + y2)-1/2(2x dx + 2y dy)


 
 z =

 If z = logex, = =
 z = x

 If z = ex, = = ex
 z = exx

 If z = sinθ, = = cosθ
 z = cosθ θ
Here, θ must be in radians.

Prepared by Prabhakar Kafle and Sanam Limbu.


If you have any queries or suggestions, please contact [email protected] or [email protected].
Exercise:
A) Compute the following:
a) (5 ± 1) + (8 ± 2) (10 ± 4)
b) (3.5 ± 0.1) × (8.0 ± 0.2)
c) (10 ± 1)/(20 ± 2)
d) (3.5 ± 0.1) × (8.0 ± 0.2)/(5.0 ± 0.4)
B) A student makes the following measurements:
a = (5 ± 1) cm, b = (18 ± 2) cm, c = (12 ± 1) cm, t = (3.0 ± 0.5) s, m = (18 ± 1) gram.
Compute the following quantities with their uncertainties and percentage uncertainties:
e) a + b + c
f) a + b – c
g) ct
h) mb/t
C) If I have measured the radius of a sphere as r = (2.0 ± 0.1) m, what should I report for the
sphere's
i) area
j) volume
D) The voltage across a capacitor is found to decay with time according to the relation

V = V0 e(-t/T)
If V = (1.8 ± 0.1) volt, V0 = (4.3 ± 0.1) volt, and t = (2.00 ± 0.05) s, find T.

Answers:
A.
a) 3±7
b) 28 ± 2
c) 0.5 ± 0.1
d) 5.6 ± 0.7
B.
e) (35 ± 4) cm = 35 cm ± 10%
f) (11 ± 4) cm = 11 cm ± 40%
g) (36 ± 9) cm = 36 cm ± 25%
h) (110 ± 40) grams·cm/s = 110 grams·cm/s ± 30%
C.
i) (50 ± 5) m2
j) (34 ± 5) m3
D. (2.3 ± 0.2) s
Prepared by Prabhakar Kafle and Sanam Limbu.
If you have any queries or suggestions, please contact [email protected] or [email protected].

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