Title: Scientific Measurements: The Metric System
1Scientific Measurements The Metric System
2Accuracy vs Precision
- When you are accurate, you are close to the
actual data (you dunk 8 out of 10 baskets) - When you are precise, you are right on the
money (you dunk 10 out of 10 baskets)
3Estimation
- When you estimate, you look at the place value
to the right of the place value you are
estimating to. If that number is 5 or above,
then you will raise the place value by 1 number - Â
- Examples
- tenths 6.43 6.4 but
6.45 6.5 - hundredths 329.152 329.15 but
329.158 329.16 - Whole numbers 987.3 987 but 169.82
170
4Organizing Data
- Mean, median and mode When you analyze a set of
data - Mean average (add up numbers and divide by the
amount of numbers you added) - 5 55 15 15 / 3 5
(mean) - median the number that represents the middle
of the data. YOU HAVE TO PUT THEM IN ORDER FROM
SMALLEST TO LARGEST - 6.2, 7.5, 4.3 put in
order 4.3 6.2 7.5 (median is 6.2) - mode when you have a number that appears the
most often - 23.7, 14.9, 23.7, 66.1 mode
23.7 - range subtract the smallest number from the
largest 66.1 14.9 51.6
5Graphs
III. Graphs Used to visually see a change or
comparison in data  Line graph shows a change
over time Â
6Bar Graphs
Bar graph shows a comparison between 2 or
more objects or event Â
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7Circle Graphs
 Circle graph uses a circle to show a
breakdown to show percentages (out of
100). Colors and patterns are often used to
show the differences. Â
8Computing Percentages for a Circle Graph
- There are 360o in a circle.
- If you have 15 to shade, then
- 360 o x .15 54o
- So you would mark the 54o with a protractor.
9The Metric System
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10SI Units (Metric System)
- The International System of Measurement (SI)
- The metric system (SI) used so scientists
everywhere can communicate with each other. Based
on the number 10. - Major units
- Length meter
- volume liters (liquids) or centimeters (solid
or liquid) - mass gram/kilogram (measured by a balance
instrument)
11Length, Mass, and Volume
- The measurement of length is used to find the
length, width or height of an object - The measurement of mass is the amount of matter
that makes up the object measured in milligrams,
grams or kilograms - (paperclip 1g)
- Volume is the amount of space the object takes
up.
12Mass vs Weight
- Mass is the amount of material that makes up an
object. (tent vs house) - Weight is completely dependent upon gravity and
mass of the object. Since gravity varies in
different places, then weight can change, but
mass does not! - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vbxZred-4_NU
13Length
- The instrument used for length is the meter
stick. - If you are dealing with AREA, use the 2 numbers
of the area formula (length x width), and square
(2) the answer 6 m x 4 m 24 m2 -
14Volume
- The instrument for volume can be either the meter
stick (for a solid -like a box), or a container
(like a bottle or container) for a liquid. - Volume, as a solid, can be measured in meters.
- Volume, as a liquid, can be measured in liters.
- Volume can also be measured in cubic centimeters
(cc) - If you are finding the volume of an object, then
you are using the 3 numbers of the volume formula
(length x width x height) 6 m x 2m x 4m 48m3
15Lab Measurement Instruments
- A meter stick is used to find length
- A balance is used to find mass.
- A scale is used to find weight.
- A graduated cylinder is used to find volume.
- The bottom of the curve of the graduated cylinder
is called the meniscus. - Liquids are heated in a flask using tongs.
16Volume of a Irregular-Shaped Object
- If you have an object that you cannot measure
with a meter stick (such as a rock), you would - 1) Fill a cylinder with water and measure from
the meniscus - 2) Put in the rock and measure the meniscus
- 3) Find the difference ( in mL)
17How Mass and Volume Affect Density
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18Density
- Density This is a physical property -
thickness of matter. It is the amount of mass
per unit of volume. Formula mass divided by
volume m/v - Example an object that has a mass of 28g and a
volume of 7 - 28 g
28g - 7 ml 4 g/ ml OR 7 cm3 4g/
cm3 - Question Does a larger object always have
greater density? Which has a greater density, a
baseball or a beach ball? - WHEN YOU HAVE GREATER MASS COMPARED TO A SMALLER
VOLUME, THE HIGHER THE DENSITY. - Rate is a ratio between 2 different types of
measurement. For example density is a ratio
between mass and volume. -
19How the Titanic Sank
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20Density is a Physical Property
Every element on the periodic table can be
identified by a special physical property. Every
element has its own specific density. In other
words, it doesnt matter how large or small the
sample is, each element would have a specific
density. So, if you wanted to identify an
element, what are the two things you could find
out about it that would prove what the element
is?
21(No Transcript)
22SI Temperature
- Temperature In SI, Celsius is normally used
instead of Fahrenheit - Conversion oC (oF-32)
- 1.8
- Freezing Point (water) 0 oC
- Boiling Point (water) 100 oC
- For extreme temperatures we use Kelvin
- K oC 273
- Absolute zero -273.15 oC or 0 K (no heat at
all) Kelvin does not use a degree mark.
23Temperature
- Kelvin is different from Fahrenheit and Celcius
in that it does not use a degree superscript (o).
To remember Kelvin, think of the magic Kelvin
number 273. Differences between Fahrenheit,
Celcius and Kelvin
24Absolute Zero
- Absolute Zero is the temperature in which there
is no molecular movement, because there is
absolutely no heat energy. Absolute Zero is as
cold as it gets. - Theoretically, Absolute Zero is achieved at 0 K
(or -273o C.) It does not occur naturally, but
there have been severa - l attempts to achieve it in a lab setting
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vK1ZWN1rqTX4
25Metric System Prefixes (Memorize These!)
- In the metric system, the prefixes of units
(meters, grams and liters) indicate if you are
dealing with whole units (a e), or fractions of
one unit (f I) - a. mega- (M) 1 000 000 x
- b. kilo- (k) 1 000 x
- c. hecto- (h) 100 x
- d. deka- (da) 10 x
- e. Main Unit 1 x (meter, gram, liter)
- f. deci- (d) 0.1 x (1/10)
- g. centi- (c) 0.01 x (1/100)
- h. milli- (m) 0.001 x (1/1000)
- i. micro- (u) 0.000 000 001 x
26Metric System Conversion
- How do you convert from one unit to another?
- First, they must be related. For example, you
can convert inches to feet or yards, but can you
convert inches to pints or quarts? - It is the same with metrics. You can convert
meters to meters, grams to grams, or liters to
liters (or cm3), but you cant convert meters to
grams or liters.
27Metric Conversion
- 0.050 cm to _____ m
- (1/500 of a centimeter how many meters?)
- Step 1 Convert larger unit to the smaller units
(how many centi are in a meter?) 100 - 0.050 divided by 100 0.0005
- 0.050 cm . 0005 meters
28Metric Conversion Steps
- 1) Which unit is the smallest?
- 2) How many of that small unit can go into one of
the large units? Write that down, because the
of 0s is how many places you are moving. - 3) If the you looking at a fraction (small units
into large), move the decimal to the left - 4) If you are looking at multiple units (large
into small), move the decimal to the right.
29Metric Conversion
- Look again 0.050 cm ? m
- 0.050 divided by 100 0.0005
- Answer 0.00050 m
- Get rid of the first and last 0 (no value)
- Answer .0005 m
- Did you notice that, because the metric system is
based on 10, you really only had to move the
decimal place? You dont have to actually divide!
30Metric Conversion
- When you divide or multiply by
- 1000, move the decimal 3 places
- 100, move the decimal 2 places
- 10, move the decimal 1 place
- If you are going from a small unit to a larger
unit (i.e. centi to a whole meter) move the
decimal to the left - If you are going from a larger unit to a smaller
unit (i.e. meter to centi) move the decimal to
the right