Do Now Take out HW to be checked Quiz FRI: Sig Figs

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Presentation transcript:

Do Now Take out HW to be checked Quiz FRI: Sig Figs Unit 1 Test THURS 9/10, FRI 9/11

Units *Unit= any standard that is used for comparison in numbers or measurement Whenever you report a measurement, you report a number followed by the unit

System International (SI) Units: an international system of measurement based on the metric system. Some common ones we’ll be working with are: Measurement Base Unit Symbol Length meter   Mass gram Volume Liter Temperature Kelvin Energy Joule Frequency Hertz Pressure Pascal Amount of Substance Mole Density grams/milliliter or grams/centimeter3 m g L K J Hz Pa mol g/mL or g/cm3

Prefixes: placed before the base unit to indicate a larger or smaller quantity; based on powers of 10.

x1000 x10 x10 x10 x10 x10 x10 x1000 x1000 Prefixes at the top of the chart represent a larger amount or quantity. Prefixes at the bottom of the chart represent a smaller amount or quantity.  

Measurement: When using tools with graduated “tick marks”, you should estimate one decimal place beyond the value of the smallest tick mark! 0.7 cm Each tick mark represents 1 cm  round to nearest 0.1 cm

Each tick mark represents 0.1 cm  round to nearest 0.01 cm

Reading Graduated Cylinders: Liquids form a curved surface when in graduated cylinders. As a standard, you should read the liquid level from the bottom of the meniscus

The Concept of Error 100 m dash 1912 record: 10.6 seconds Usain Bolt 100 m dash: 9.58 seconds

The Concept of Error Michael Phelps 100 m butterfly: 50.58 seconds—beats 2nd place Milorad Cavic by 0.01 seconds!

The Concept of Error 3 4 Different people may report a different measurement when estimating the last digit

The Concept of Error With each measurement, there is a degree of uncertainty/estimation beyond the markings The last digit in a measurement is called the uncertain digit Significant figures include all measured digits + the uncertain digit The more significant figures, the more precise the measurement

Significant Figures All non-zero numbers are ALWAYS significant 15=2 sig figs 145=3 sig figs

Significant Figures Zeros between nonzero digits (squished zeros) are ALWAYS significant 105=3 sig figs 5005=4 sig figs ALL zeros to the left of the first nonzero are NOT significant 0.0005=1 sig fig 0.0505=3 sig figs

Sig Fig Clarifications If there is a decimal point, the 0’s at the end of the number DO count 9010.0 = 5 sig figs If there is no decimal point, the 0’s at the end of the number DO NOT count! 91010 = 4 sig figs For scientific notation, only count the sig figs for the decimal part (not the x 10x part)

Pacific-Atlantic Method for Counting Significant Figures If the decimal point is present, start counting digits from the Pacific (left) side, starting with the first non-zero digit If the decimal point is absent, start counting digits from the Atlantic (right) side, starting with the first nonzero digit

How Many Sig Figs? 4 2 2 4 5 8 3 2 2 4 1234 ________ 0.023 ________ 1234 ________ 0.023 ________ 890 ________ 91010 ________ 9010.0 ________ 1090.0010 ________ 0.00120 ________ 3.4 x 104 ________ 9.0 x 103 ________ 9.010 x 10-2 ________ 2 2 4 5 8 3 2 2 4

Calculations with Units and Sig Figs You can only add or subtract with like units. Your final answer will be expressed in that same unit When multiplying/dividing: Units can be different  Express all units that did not cancel

Calculating with Significant Figures Adding and Subtracting: Count the number of decimal places for each measurement. Round the final answer to the lowest number of decimal places.

Original Problem Raw Answer Final Answer w/ Proper Sig Figs and Units 3.482 cm + 8.51 cm + 16.324 cm   48.0032 g + 9.17 g + 65.4321 g 80.4 cm - 16.532 cm 106.5mL - 30. mL 28.316 cm 28.32 cm 28.32 cm, 122.61 cm, 63.9 cm, 77 mL

Calculating with Significant Figures Multiplying and Dividing: Count the number of significant figures for each measurement Round the final answer to the lowest number of significant figures

Original Problem Raw Answer Final Answer w/ Proper Sig Figs and Units 48.2 cm × 1.6 cm × 2.12 cm   8.3 m × 4.0 m × 0.9823 m 64.34 cm3 ÷ 8.149 cm 4.93 mm2 ÷ 18.71 mm 32.61236 m3 33 cm3 160 cm3, 33 m3, 7.895 cm2, 0.263 mm

Volume Volume=amount of space an object takes up Ways we can measure volume: For liquids: using glassware When using a graduated cylinder, read the value from the bottom of the meniscus

Volume Ways to measure volume For regular solids: length x width x height

Volume Ways to measure volume For irregular solids: water displacement 40 mL 40-20 = 20 mL

Density Density=the amount of mass in a given volume.

Which cube has a greater density? Both cubes take up the same amount of space (volume), but cube A has more matter (mass)

Using the Density Formula mass density volume

Density Practice: Round answer to proper number of sig figs! If a sample of copper has a mass of 4.23 g and has a measured volume of 1.31 mL, what is its density?   A piece of metal with a mass of 147 g is placed in a 50 mL graduated cylinder. The water level rises from 20 mL to 41 mL. What is the density of the metal? What is the volume of a sample that has a mass of 20 g and a density of 4 g/mL? The mass of the element is 10.23 g. The volume of the water it was placed in was 20.0 mL. The volume of the water after the element was placed in it was 21.5 mL. What is the density?   3.23 g/mL, 7.0 g/mL, 5 mL, 6.82 g/mL