330 likes | 461 Views
Presenting Numerical Values from an Investigation. Version 080104. Outline. Uncertainty Propagation of Uncertainty Least Squares Fit to Lines. Online References. www.av8n.com/physics/uncertainty.htm mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFitting.html www.physics.csulb.edu/151lab/exp4/lsf.html.
E N D
Presenting Numerical Values from an Investigation Version 080104
Outline • Uncertainty • Propagation of Uncertainty • Least Squares Fit to Lines
Online References • www.av8n.com/physics/uncertainty.htm • mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFitting.html • www.physics.csulb.edu/151lab/exp4/lsf.html
Which is the best measurement?Which measurement is consistent with the previously published result? • 6.63 E-34 Js • 6.7 E-34 Js • 6.623 E-34 Js
Which is the best measurement?Which measurement is consistent with the previously published result? • 6.613 ±0.003 E-34 Js • 6.7 ±0.2 E-34 Js • 6.622±0.001 E-34 Js
Uncertainty CJ’s bad karma Best Power Supply money can buy 30 yr old piece of precision equipment Best measurements that can be performed Voltage stabilization circuit built by Floyd Vibrations from Levi Center construction
Cumulative Set of Measurementsby Lab Unit #1 # of Occurances
Cumulative Set of Measurementsby Lab Unit #2 # of Occurances should report center and width of distribution
45±1 45±2 may look like numbers, but they’re not.It’s a way to specify a probability distribution
Relative Uncertainty An experiment measures the value of the fundamental charge to be: (1.84 ± 0.09) x 10-19 Coulombs or 1.14 ± 0.06 e
Sig Figs are for Losers “Non-experts tend to talk about ‘significant digits’, but this approach is heavily flawed. Professionals general prefer to speak in terms of quantifying the uncertainty.”
Why Sig Fig approach is bad An experiment measures the value of the fundamental charge to be: 1.1 e 1.149 1.050 10% rel unc. is implied Sig Fig approach: 1) misrepresents the true uncertainty (actually the uncertainty is not specified) 2) throws away information 3) can produce erroneous results (see linear fits) Physicists present a ‘reasonable number’ of digits in published work, but many more digits in calculations.
Example Calculational tools for an investigation return the result: 1.64578359 ± 0.05385672 meters Q: In a professional paper this should be presented as (?): 1.6458 ± 0.0539 meters 1.646 ± 0.054 meters 1.65 ± 0.05 meters 1.6 ± 0.1 meters
Notation • 1.646 ± 0.054 meters • 1.646 (54) meters • 1.646 ± 3% meters preferred for written work preferred for conversation
If you have something worth saying, don’t say it in terms of sig figs.
Types of Uncertainty • Statistical • Systematic
What is the “Correct” Answer? • “In classroom settings, people often get the idea that the goal is to report an uncertainty that reflects the difference between the measured value and the ‘correct’ value.” • “That idea certainly doesn’t work in real life – if you knew the ‘correct’ value you wouldn’t need to make measurements.”
LEAST SQUARES FITTING Figures and equations from: mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFitting.html
y = a0 + a1 x + a2 x2 + … The Excel “trendline” function isn’t good enough. One must always present uncertainties to be a member of the physics community. Use “linest” to get the parameters and their corresponding uncertainities. Use “trendline” to draw the graph.
Minimize square-deviation wrt choice of coefficients assume linear fn
intercept a = slope b =
Using the Excel function LINEST Slope = INDEX(LINEST(y-values,x-values,TRUE,TRUE),1,1) Uncertainty in Slope = INDEX(LINEST(y-values,x-values,TRUE,TRUE),2,1) Intercept = INDEX(LINEST(y-values,x-values,TRUE,TRUE),1,2) Uncertainty in Intercept = INDEX(LINEST(y-values,x-values,TRUE,TRUE),2,2)