Significant figures/rounding what the heck.

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The discussion revolves around confusion regarding significant figures and rounding in a textbook's solutions. A user questions the textbook's answer of 4.02x10^{25} for the calculation \frac{1.20kg}{2.99x10^{-26}kg}, believing the correct answer should be 4.01x10^{25}. Participants note that significant figures can be subjective, with various rounding methods leading to different results. They emphasize that as long as the answer is close to the correct value, it can be considered acceptable. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the variability in rounding practices and the often subjective nature of significant figures.
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Didn't use the template because it didn't make sense to do so for my question..

Simple question here regarding significant figures. I am working through a textbook and in the answer section they often seem to round off to odd numbers which makes no sense to me. I decided to ignore it at first because I am so sure that I am doing it correctly, I mean... I learned to round in grade 2 :rolleyes: . But it seems to happen a lot and I figure that the person writing the text wasn't an idiot so...

for \frac{1.20kg}{2.99x10^{-26}kg} they have their answer as 4.02x10^{25}. I say that its 4.01x10^{25}

Who's right? and why if I am not right.
 
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According to my TI-83, you're right. Why is this bugging you? It's irrelevant. They often make mistakes, since writing down solutions on back pages of books isn't a very exciting and caution-keeping job. :wink:
 
Okay, I thought I was losing my mind or something. lol
 
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I definitely agree that it is pretty insignificant, but it was happening like 1/5th of the time so it started to bug me.
 
You have to remember that significant figures are a heuristic device that usually approximates a reasonable estimate of error.

As such, there really isn't a "right" answer, and there are several different approaches to it. For example, "round to the nearest even number" is not terribly infrequent.
 
Yes. Just remember that with rounding to Sig. Figs, that as long as your answer is realitively close to the correct answer, it's correct. I mean, most times you wouldn't get the same answer, but just make sure yours is around it.
 
Alright great. Thanks :)
 

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