What is the area, and approximate uncertainty in a circle....

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the area of a circle with a radius of 3.1e4 cm and understanding the associated uncertainty. The area is computed as approximately 3.0e9 cm², but there is confusion regarding the uncertainty, which is stated as ±0.2e9 cm² in the textbook. Participants clarify that the uncertainty in the radius should be based on significant figures, with a suggested error of ±0.05 rather than ±0.1. The conversation also highlights a note from the textbook that indicates how to interpret the accuracy of measurements, which may explain the discrepancy in uncertainty values. Ultimately, the discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding significant figures and the implications for calculating uncertainty in measurements.
JustynSC
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Homework Statement


What is the area, and approximate uncertainty in a circle with radius 3.1*10^4 cm (or written: 3.1e4 cm)?

Homework Equations


Area=Pi*r^2

The Attempt at a Solution


My attempt to the solution took some trial and error, and it went as follows:
Substitute the circle's radius into the equation for the area of the circle: A=Pi(3.1e4)^2
Then I squared the () : A=Pi(9.61e8)
Following this I Multiplied by Pi: 3.017e9 cm^2 (sig fig) ==> 3.0e9 cm^2

This answer above Is correct, but in the book the answer is 3.0+/-0.2e9 cm^2.
The part that I do not understand is that the uncertainty they predict is +/-0.2

I figured that the uncertainty should be +/- 0.1e4, giving the radius a minimum of 3.0e4, and a max of 3.2e4.
Based on my way of working though the problem, my answer come out to be A=3.0+/-0.1e9 cm^2

If anyone can explain why my uncertainty isn't correct, and how they get that answer that would be wonderful!
 
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I agree with your answer, but the error in 3.1 is +/-0.05, not +/-0.1. That's a 1 in 60 error, so the error in the area should be 1 in 30.
 
haruspex said:
I agree with your answer, but the error in 3.1 is +/-0.05, not +/-0.1. That's a 1 in 60 error, so the error in the area should be 1 in 30.
How do you come up with the error as 0.05 when the device used to measure does not specify that is has the exact measurements to the hundredth of a cm? In other words, if the .00 is not represented, how can it be used as the error?
Thirdly, I do not understand what you mean by 1 in 60 and 1 in 30
 
JustynSC said:
How do you come up with the error as 0.05 when the device used to measure does not specify that is has the exact measurements to the hundredth of a cm? In other words, if the .00 is not represented, how can it be used as the error?
Thirdly, I do not understand what you mean by 1 in 60 and 1 in 30
You did not specify an error range for the radius, so it is implied by the number of significant digits. Quoting 3.1 implies something from 3.05 to 3.15. Had the radius been between 3.00 and 3.05?then the stated measurement should have been 3.0.

An error of 0.05 in a measurement of about 3 is a one part in sixty error, 0.05/3=1/60.
 
Thanks for the help! I get it now.
 
haruspex said:
You did not specify an error range for the radius, so it is implied by the number of significant digits. Quoting 3.1 implies something from 3.05 to 3.15. Had the radius been between 3.00 and 3.05?then the stated measurement should have been 3.0.

An error of 0.05 in a measurement of about 3 is a one part in sixty error, 0.05/3=1/60.
So I was looking into the problem a little further and I might have missed a minor detail that explains why they did not use +/- 0.05 as the error. But I still can't figure out how they justify the answer to be within +/- 0.2
Here is the Note at the start of all problems:
assume a number like 6.4 is accurate to +/- 0.01, and 950 is +/-10 unless 950 is said to be "precisely" or "very nearly" 950, in which case assume 950 +/- 1.
I hope this help explain how they have their answer in the back of the book differing from ours.
 
JustynSC said:
So I was looking into the problem a little further and I might have missed a minor detail that explains why they did not use +/- 0.05 as the error. But I still can't figure out how they justify the answer to be within +/- 0.2
Here is the Note at the start of all problems:
assume a number like 6.4 is accurate to +/- 0.01, and 950 is +/-10 unless 950 is said to be "precisely" or "very nearly" 950, in which case assume 950 +/- 1.
I hope this help explain how they have their answer in the back of the book differing from ours.
I believe you have a typo, and that the book says - or should have said - something like
assume a number like 6.4 is accurate to ± 0.1
not ± 0.01.
 
JustynSC said:
So I was looking into the problem a little further and I might have missed a minor detail that explains why they did not use +/- 0.05 as the error. But I still can't figure out how they justify the answer to be within +/- 0.2
Here is the Note at the start of all problems:
assume a number like 6.4 is accurate to +/- 0.01, and 950 is +/-10 unless 950 is said to be "precisely" or "very nearly" 950, in which case assume 950 +/- 1.
I hope this help explain how they have their answer in the back of the book differing from ours.
Assuming, as SammyS says, that should read 6.4+/-0.1...
Ok, but that is a bit unusual. One would normally take 6.4 as being accurate to that many figures, so represents a range 6.35 to 6.45.
JustynSC said:
giving the radius a minimum of 3.0e4, and a max of 3.2e4
Ok, but what areas do you calculate from those two radii?
 
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