0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views3 pages

SI Measurement

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 3

1. What is SI measurement?

The International System of Units (SI), commonly known as the metric system of
units, is the international standard for measurement. The metric system is used in
scientific work. The units of this system included the gram, meter, and liter.

2. What are the prefixes used in SI measurement?

Common Metric system prefixes, along with their symbols or abbreviations and
mathematical meanings. The meaning of a metric system prefix is independent pf the
base unit it modifies and always remains constant. They are; nano- (one-billionth),
micro- (one-millionth), deci- (one-tenth), kilo- (one thousand), mega- (one million), and
giga- (one billion).

3. What do you mean by the precision and accuracy?

Accuracy refers to how closely the measured value of a quantity corresponds to


its true value while precision expresses the degree of reproducibility or agreement
between repeated measurements. The more measurements you make and the better
the precision, the smaller the error will be.
4. What are the rules applied in significant figures?

RULES FOR SIGNIFICANT FIGURES


1. All non-zero numbers ARE significant. The number 33.2 has THREE significant
figures because all of the digits present are non-zero.
2. Zeros between two non-zero digits ARE significant. 2051 has FOUR significant
figures. The zero is between a 2 and a 5.
3. Leading zeros are NOT significant. They're nothing more than "place holders." The
number 0.54 has only TWO significant figures. 0.0032 also has TWO significant figures.
All of the zeros are leading.
4. Trailing zeros to the right of the decimal ARE significant. There are FOUR significant
figures in 92.00.
92.00 is different from 92: a scientist who measures 92.00 milliliters knows his value to
the nearest 1/100th milliliter; meanwhile his colleague who measured 92 milliliters only
knows his value to the nearest 1 milliliter. It's important to understand that "zero" does
not mean "nothing." Zero denotes actual information, just like any other number. You
cannot tag on zeros that aren't certain to belong there.
5. Trailing zeros in a whole number with the decimal shown ARE significant. Placing a
decimal at the end of a number is usually not done. By convention, however, this
decimal indicates a significant zero. For example, "540." indicates that the trailing zero
IS significant; there are THREE significant figures in this value.
6. Trailing zeros in a whole number with no decimal shown are NOT significant. Writing
just "540" indicates that the zero is NOT significant, and there are only TWO significant
figures in this value.
7. Exact numbers have an INFINITE number of significant figures. This rule applies to
numbers that are definitions. For example, 1 meter = 1.00 meters = 1.0000 meters =
1.0000000000000000000 meters, etc.
So now back to the example posed in the Rounding Tutorial: Round 1000.3 to four
significant figures. 1000.3 has five significant figures (the zeros are between non-zero
digits 1 and 3, so by rule 2 above, they are significant.) We need to drop the final 3, and
since 3 < 5, we leave the last zero alone. so 1000. is our four-significant-figure answer.
(from rules 5 and 6, we see that in order for the trailing zeros to "count" as significant,
they must be followed by a decimal. Writing just "1000" would give us only one
significant figure.)
8. For a number in scientific notation: N x 10x, all digits comprising N ARE significant by
the first 6 rules; "10" and "x" are NOT significant. 5.02 x 104 has THREE significant
figures: "5.02." "10 and "4" are not significant.
Rule 8 provides the opportunity to change the number of significant figures in a value by
manipulating its form. For example, let's try writing 1100 with THREE significant figures.
By rule 6, 1100 has TWO significant figures; its two trailing zeros are not significant. If
we add a decimal to the end, we have 1100., with FOUR significant figures (by rule 5.)
But by writing it in scientific notation: 1.10 x 103, we create a THREE-significant-figure
value.

You might also like