What is the approximate weight of a 20.kg rock

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the interpretation of the weight of a 20.kg rock, which is calculated as 200N when considering significant figures. The notation "20.kg" indicates that the zero is significant, implying two significant figures. Participants clarify the difference between "20 kg," "20.0 kg," and "20.kg," emphasizing the importance of notation in scientific measurements. The conversation also touches on the reliability of teaching methods, with one participant expressing frustration over their teacher's inaccuracies. Ultimately, the correct answer, accounting for significant figures, is confirmed as 200N.
vaironl
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Since it has a decimal it would be 20kg * 9.8m/s which equals 196kg m/s^2 = 196N

But the decimal means i have to round two sig figs, which would make it 200N?

A very simple problem, I really don't know why I'm asking it.
 
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tiny-tim said:
hi vaironl! :smile:

do you mean 20.0 kg ?

if so, that's three significant figures :wink:

Thanks for the reply, tim. "And let me say, that is a big post count"

My paper says 20.kg so I'm rounding to two significant figures. Am I right?
 
i've no idea what "20.kg" means :redface:

i understand "20 kg" and "20.0 kg", but I've never seen "20.kg" or even "20. kg" :confused:
 
Yes that is correct. When you see things like 20.kg, it means that the 0 is significant. If it were simply 20kg without the decimal, that would mean the number is only accurate to 1 significant figure. If, as tiny-tim advised, it were 20.0 kg, it would mean the second 0 is significant as well and there are 3 significant figures to take into account.

So your answer is 200N, accurate to 2 significant figures.

Scientific notation is really great because it clears these kind of odd notations. 20kg to 2 significant figures in SI notation would be 2.0 x 10^1 kg, clearly showing the 0 is significant.
 
ah! thanks, Pengwuino! :smile:
 
tiny-tim said:
i've no idea what "20.kg" means :redface:

i understand "20 kg" and "20.0 kg", but I've never seen "20.kg" or even "20. kg" :confused:

Pengwuino said:
Yes that is correct. When you see things like 20.kg, it means that the 0 is significant. If it were simply 20kg without the decimal, that would mean the number is only accurate to 1 significant figure. If, as tiny-tim advised, it were 20.0 kg, it would mean the second 0 is significant as well and there are 3 significant figures to take into account.

So your answer is 200N, accurate to 2 significant figures.

Scientific notation is really great because it clears these kind of odd notations. 20kg to 2 significant figures in SI notation would be 2.0 x 10^1 kg, clearly showing the 0 is significant.

Thanks, I knew something was going wrong. My teacher usually does things like that.
I can't believe sometimes he even gets about 3-6 problems incorrectly which demonstrates unprofessional work ethic.
 
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