ISA Skills Flashcards

1
Q

Accepted Value

A

The value of the most ACCURATE measurement available.

Sometimes called the true value

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2
Q

Accuracy

A

Measure of confidence in a measurement.

Expressed as an upper and lower limit (eg 9.8+-0.3ms^-2)

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3
Q

Dependent variable

A

The variable which value changes as a result of a change in the independent value.
Usually plotted on the y-axis

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4
Q

Error

A

The difference between a measurement and its accepted value.
NOT a mistake made in taking a reading

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5
Q

Indenpendat variable

A

Physical quantities whose values are controlled by the experimenter.
Plotted on the x and affects the dependant

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6
Q

Linearity

A

constant gradient and y=mx+c can be used

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7
Q

Mean vlaue

A

Calculated by adding the readings and dividing by the number of readings

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8
Q

Percentage uncertainty

A

(uncertainty)/(mean value)*100

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9
Q

Precision

A

The degree of “exactness”(Number of sig figs) to which a measurement can be obtained consistently

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10
Q

How does one calculate the precision of a measurement that has multiple values (mean value)

A

Take half the max range

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11
Q

What is the precision of an instrument

A

The smallest non-zero reading that can be meau

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12
Q

Random error

A

Errors with no pattern or bias.
Are unpredictable.
Effect of these errors are reduced by taking more values

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13
Q

Range

A

Difference between smallest and largest values of a set

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14
Q

Reliability

A

The extent to which measurements of a quantity remain consistent over repeated measurements of the same quantity under the same conditions.

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15
Q

How can one find the reliability from a graph

A

Look how close the measurements are to the best fit line

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16
Q

Why use the gradient rather than a point to find the value of a quantity

A

using just one point is very unreliable and the more points you take, the more accurate the results become. a gradient is essential a multitude of points in one

17
Q

How does one calculate gradient from a graph

A

= change in y/change in x *must use at least an 8cmx8cm triangle

18
Q

How many sig figs should a value be given to

A

The minimum used but always more than 1

19
Q

Systematic error

A

error which is the same throughout an experiment e.g. background radiation

20
Q

Parallax error

A

error in readings caused by the shifting position of the observer, relative to the measuring device

21
Q

When is parallax particularly an issue

A

in measuring curved edges

22
Q

What does a parallax error imply for the uncertainty in a measurement

A

Always higher than it would be otherwise