Chapter 1 - Physics and Measurement
Chapter 1 - Physics and Measurement
Outline
- What is Physics?
- Theory & Experiment
- Matter & Model Building
- Density & Atomic Mass
- Measurements
- Basic Physical Quantities & SI Unit Used in Mechanics
- Reasonableness of Results
- Symbols
- Prefixes
- Dimension & Dimensional Analysis
- Units vs Dimensions
- Conversion of Units
- Estimated & Order-of-Magnitude Calculations
- Uncertainty in Measurements
- Significant Figures
- Precision & Accuracy
What is Physics?
= Fundamental Science which
concerned with the basic principles of the Universe which
is dealing with MATTER & ENERGY
Energy can take the form of:
motion
Energy
light
electricity
gravity
and so on..
Physics deals with matter on scales ranging from sub-
atomic particles (i.e: the particles that make up an atom) to
the stars & even entire galaxies
How Physics Works?
Utilizes the scientific method to formulate & test hypotheses that
are based on observation of the natural world
Division of Physics:
Classical physics - classical mechanics, thermodynamics,
optics & EM
Modern physics (phenomena that could not be explained by
classical physics) - relativity & quantum mechanics
Model:
= a system of physical components
useful when we cannot directly interact with a phenomenon
can be changed
can make problems easier to visualize can help to predict the
behaviour of the system
Model of Matter
Modeling Technique:
Identify a system of physical components for the problem
Make predictions of the behavior of the system based on the interactions
among the components and/or the components and the environment
Atomic Mass:
= total number of protons & neutrons in the element
measured in atomic mass units (u):
1 u = 1.6605387 x 10-27 kg
Measurements
Used to describe natural phenomena
Needs defined standards
Remember,
All measured physical quantities have units.
Units are VITAL in physics!!
Reasonableness of Results
***Always ask is a result is reasonable or believable???
Don't rely entirely on your calculation!
Example:
If you're working in the lab and calculate that an air track glider had a
speed of 567.89 m/s, STOP! That's an ernormous speed. Something has
gone wrong!
Make an estimate before going through the detailed calculations.
Symbols
The symbol used in an equation is not necessarily the symbol used
for its dimension
Some quantities have one symbol used consistently
Example: time is t virtually all the time
Some quantities have many symbols used, depending upon the
specific situation
Example: lengths may be x, y, z, r, d, h, etc.
Prefixes
correspond to the powers of 10
Each prefix:
has a specific name
has a specific abbreviation (symbol)
can be used with any basic units
are multipliers of the base unit
E.g: 1 mm = 10-3 m
1 mg = 10-3 g
Dimensional analysis:
= Technique to check the correctness of an equation @ to assist in
deriving an equation
Both sides of equation must have the same dimensions
Limitation: Cannot give numerical factors
Example:
Given the equation: x = at 2. Check dimensions on each side.
[ ] = (1/2)[][ 2 ]
[ ]
[] = 2
[ 2 ]
[ ]
= dimensionally correct
Unit vs Dimensions
Dimensions: L, T, M, L/T
Units: m, mm, cm, kg, g, s, hr, years
Conversion of Units
**When units are not consistent, you may need to convert to
appropriate ones
Example:
350 kilometers = ? meters ?
Answer:
Order-of-Magnitude & Estimation
Order of Magnitude:
= an estimate given as a power of ten
used to make very approximate comparisons and
reflect very large differences
If two numbers have the same order of magnitude,
they are about the same size
But if we compare the surface of an orange with that of
the earth the surface of the earth is many orders of
magnitude larger than that of the orange
Estimation:
It is often sufficient for an estimation to be within an order of
magnitude of the value in question
Example:
Earth is approximately 1 107 meters in diameter. Which of the
following could be Earths diameter?
A) 1,271,543 meters C) 127,154,300 meters
B) 12,715,430 meters D) 1,271,543,000 meters
Answer: B
Uncertainty in Measurements
No measurement is exact
There is always some uncertainty due to limited instrument
accuracy & difficulty reading results
Example:
It would be difficult to measure the
width of this piece of wood to better
than a millimeter
There is uncertainty in every measurement
This uncertainty carries over through the calculations
So, need a technique to account for this uncertainty
We will use rules for significant figures to approximate the
uncertainty in results of calculations
Significant Figures
= digits that carry meaning contributing to its measurement result
tell you how precise a measured value
**When we carry out calculations, we often get the result as a number with many
digits. We usually do not need them all.
Zeroes sandwiched between non-zero
Example:
digits are always significant
1. Let's round off 64,492 to:
i.e.: 205 3 s.f
(a) 1 significant figure 60,000 @ 6 104
(b) 2 significant figures 64,000 @ 6.4 104
Zeroes that come before all non-zero
(c) 3 significant figures 64,500 @ 6.45 104 digits are never significant
(d) 4 significant figures 64,490 @ 6.449 104 i.e.: 0.0023 2 s.f
(e) 5 significant figures 64,492 @ 6.4492 104
Zeroes that come after non-zero digits:
2. Let's round off 92.810576 to: a) 83,000 2 s.f not significant
a) 1 significant figure 90 b) 83,000. 5 s.f significant
b) 3 significant figure 92.8 c) 83.000 5 s.f significant
c) 5 significant figure 92.810
** 14 not has same s.f with 14.0
d) 6 significant figure 92.8106
2 s.f 3 s.f
3. Let's round off 0.0046753 to:
a) significant figure 0.005 @ 5 10-3
b) 2 significant figure 0.0047 @ 4.7 10-3
c) 4 significant figure 0.004675 @ 4.675 10-3
Lt = 1.85 m
Lt = 0.307
Example 2:
Precision of an Instrument
= the smallest unit that the instrument can measure
- Example:
Extra Notes:
Propagation of
Uncertainties