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Significant Figures The Four Rules.

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Presentation on theme: "Significant Figures The Four Rules."— Presentation transcript:

1 Significant Figures The Four Rules

2 Rule #1: All non-zero numbers are always…
SIGNIFICANT!!! 4 3 6 9 2 7 8 1 5

3 So, the only number to worry about is…

4 Using Othello to understand Rule #2
Zeros between non-zero numbers are always significant

5 Using Othello to understand Rule #2
Zeros between non-zero numbers are always significant

6 The Other Zero Rules Rule #3:
All final zeros to the ______ of a decimal point are significant. right Rule #4: Zeros that act as ____________ are NOT significant. placeholders

7 For rule #3 and #4, it can be summarized by these two questions:
1) Is there a decimal point? 2) Is there a number in front of the zero? Answering yes to both of these questions means that the zeros are significant figures.

8 Significant? .0

9 Another note: if a number is written in scientific notation, all numbers before the x 10 are significant, all numbers after are not significant.

10 Is It Significant?

11 16407.100 0.00010080 904008000 Significant Non-Significant 8 sig figs

12 Let’s look at some examples
a L b L c x 105 kg d kg 4 significant figures 7 significant figures 5 significant figures 3 significant figures

13 Let’s look at some examples
a s b mL c x 10-8 g d mL 5 significant figures 3 significant figures 5 significant figures 2 significant figures

14 So, why are significant figures important?
Significant figures and math

15 Addition and Subtraction
When adding or subtracting—the answer has the least number of decimal places Hint: Before adding and subtracting, line up all the numbers so the decimal points align. 187.6 961.95 18.95 189.9 19

16 Multiplication and Division
When multiplying or dividing—the product has the least number of significant figures 21.6 x (3 sig figs) 7216 ÷ (4 sig figs) (2 sig figs) (2 sig figs) 1.4472 (2 sig figs) (2 sig figs) 1.4 210000 Or 2.1 x 105

17 Now, try some of these on your own

18 Addition a) 43.2 cm 51.0 cm + 48.7 cm b) 258.3 kg 257.1 1 kg + 253 kg
c) mg mg mg kg mg 142.9 cm 768 kg mg

19 Multiplication a) 24 m x 3.26 m = 78.24 m = 78 m b) 120 m x 0.10 m
c) 1.23 m x 2.0 m = 2.46 m = 2.5 m d) 53.0 m x 1.53 m = m = 81.1 m

20 Why do we have them? When we measure things, we want to measure to the place we are sure of and guess one more space.

21 So, they show the uncertainty in our measurements

22 Since the marks on this ruler are subdivided as they are, our answer for the length of this nail has 3 significant figures.

23 However, we only have significant figures when we are measuring something. Counting will give you an exact number.


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