what to do with s.f. and rounding in a series of calculations
Zellmer, Robert
zellmer.1 at osu.edu
Fri Jan 13 08:30:56 EST 2023
I may have mentioned this in lecture, and you should have learned this in 1210
(or its equivalent) but just in case here's how you should handle sig. fig. in calculations.
When doing a series of calculations, you should keep track of the s.f. in each step but
carry extra digits to the next step. How many extra? At least one. I usually use store
the number with lots of extra digits (in my calculator's memory registers - which you all
know how to use after having your romantic evening with your calculator). In lecture I
often carry several extra digits and underline the last significant digit. You've seen me
do this if you've been in lecture.
On a quiz, you should carry extra digits and round the final answer. Doing this
prevents what we call "round-off" error in the final answer.
For lab, in the sample calculations you determine a number for a step, including extra
digits. Then write it with the correct number of s.f. (and units of course). If the number
is required in the report or report quiz (presentation of data section, table, etc. ) you
record it there with the correct s.f. If you need to use the number in a subsequent
calculation you should use the un-rounded number (with the extra digits).
Hopefully, this makes sense.
Dr. Zellmer
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.osu.edu/pipermail/cbc-chem1220/attachments/20230113/be53a320/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the cbc-chem1220
mailing list