Book 1
Book 1
Book 1
Significant Figures
• Engineers often are doing calculations with numbers based
on measurements. Depending on the technique used, the
precision of the measurements can vary greatly.
Example
A scale to increments of 10 lbs is not very precise, but, if
it is well calibrated, it is accurate.
Courtesy: http://www.chem.tamu.edu/class/fyp/mathrev/mr-sigfg.html
Precision vs. Accuracy
Example
A scale to increments of tenths of a gram has good
precision, however, if it is not well calibrated, it would
not be accurate.
Example
A meterstick, with millimeter divisions as the smallest divisions, can
measure a length to a precise number of millimeters and estimate a
fraction of a millimeter between two divisions.
Significant figures - All the digits that are measured or known accurately + the
one estimated digit
Example
Example
Conversion factors : 1 foot = 12 inches
Counts of objects: 23 students in a class
Courtesy: http://www.chem.sc.edu/faculty/morgan/resources/sigfigs/sigfigs4.html
Addition and Subtraction
of Significant Figures
When quantities are added or subtracted, the number of
decimal places (not significant figures) in the answer
should be the same as the least number of decimal
places in any of the numbers being added or subtracted.
Example
50.67 J (2 decimal places - 4 significant fig.)
0.1 J (1 decimal place - 1 significant fig.)
+ 0.9378 J (4 decimal places - 4 significant fig.)
51.7078 J (4 decimal places - 6 significant fig.)
The first division should result in 3 significant figures. The last division
should result in 2 significant figures. In addition of three numbers, the
answer should result in 1 decimal place.
Result: 8.6 ROUNDING !!! (1 decimal place - 2 sig. fig.)
Combination of Operations
IF YOU ROUND THE INTERMEDIATE RESULTS:
Example
(5.01 / 1.235) + 3.000 + (6.35 / 4.0)=
4.06 + 3.000 + 1.6=8.66
• http://www.chem.sc.edu/faculty/morgan/resources/
sigfigs/sigfigs8.html
• http://science.widener.edu/svb/tutorial/sigfigures.html
• http://www.lon-capa.org/~mmp/applist/sigfig/sig.htm