New Microsoft Word Document (3)
New Microsoft Word Document (3)
SI Base
Base Quantity Symbol Symbol
Unit
Mass m Kilogram kg
Thermodynamic
T Kelvin K
temperature
Derived
Symbol SI Derived Unit Base Terms
Quantity
"The number of derived quantities of interest in science and technology has no limit."
2. Supplementary Units (Now Grouped as Derived Units):
"Pure geometrical units (radian and steradian) were classified by the System
International (SI) as supplementary units."
"This designation was abrogated in 20th CGPM in 1995 and the units were grouped as
derived units."
3. Radian (Angle Measurement):
"One radian (1 rad) is the angle subtended at the center of a circle by an arc with a
length equal to the radius of the circle."
Formula:
Number of radians (θ)=Arc Length (S)/Radius (r)
Relation between radians and degrees:
2π rad=360∘ or 1 rad=360∘/2π≈57.3∘
"An angle of approximately 57° corresponds to 1 radian."
Key Takeaways for NMDCAT:
1. Derived units (e.g., m², m/s) are combinations of base units.
2. Radian definition and conversion to degrees (1 rad≈57.3∘).
3. Practical application (gear problem) using arc length and angular displacement.
1. Steradian (Solid Angle)
"Steradian is defined as the solid angle subtended at the center of sphere by an area of
its surface equal to the square of radius of that sphere."
Formula:
Number of steradians in sphere=Area of Sphere/r^2=4πr^2/r^2=4π sr
Key fact: A full sphere subtends 4π steradians at its center.
o "If we wanted to estimate, as how many atoms are contained in the bodies of all
the people on Earth, we could do this calculation easily. The population of earth is
approximately 7 billion (or 7×10^9). To find our answer we have to
multiply 7×10^27 by 7×10^9. We do this by multiplying the two mantissas
and adding their exponents:"
(7×10^27)×(7×10^9)=(7×7)×10^27+9=49×10^36=4.9×10^37
o "In the last step, we follow the common convention of keeping only one digit in
front of the decimal point of the mantissa and adjusting the exponent
accordingly."
1. Definition of Prefixes:
o "A mechanism through which a term in scientific notation is expressed by giving
a proper name to its power of ten is called prefix to the power of ten."
o "A useful set of prefixes in SI replace given powers of 10, Prefixes makes standard
form to be written even more easily."
2. Examples of Prefix Usage:
o "For example, the length of a housefly, 5×10^−3 m, is equivalent to 5 millimeters
(mm), and the distance of a satellite 8.25×10^5 m from Earth's surface can be
expressed as 825 kilometers (km)."
Key takeaways:
Prefixes provide named shortcuts for powers of ten in SI units
They simplify the expression of very large or very small quantities
Examples show conversion between scientific notation and prefixed units (mm for 10^-3,
km for 10^3)
WRITING UNIT SYMBOLS & NAMES
1. General Rules for Unit Symbols:
o "Unit symbols are printed in roman (upright) type regardless of the type used in
the surrounding text. For example m for metre, s for second and Pa for pascal."
2. Prefix Usage Rules:
o "A multiple or sub-multiple prefix, if used, is part of the unit and precedes the
unit symbol without a separator. A prefix is never used in isolation, and
compound prefixes are never used. For example nm, not mµm or pm not µµ."
3. Multiplication and Division of Units:
o "Multiplication must be indicated by a space or a half-high (centred) dot (·), since
otherwise some prefixes could be misinterpreted as a unit symbol."
o "Division is indicated by a horizontal line, by a solidus (oblique stroke, /) or by
negative exponents. For example N m or N·m, for a newton metre and m/s or m
s⁻¹ for metre per second."
4. Prohibited Abbreviations:
o "It is not permissible to use abbreviations for unit symbols or unit names, such as
sec (for either s or second), sq. mm (for either mm² or square millimetre), cc (for
either cm³ or cubic centimetre), or mps (for either m/s or metre per second)."
Key Takeaways:
Unit symbols must always be in roman type
Prefixes must be attached directly to unit symbols without spaces
Proper notation is required for multiplication (space or dot) and division (/ or negative
exponent)
Common abbreviations like "sec" or "cc" are not allowed in formal scientific writing
5. Unit Names and Powers:
o "When multiple of unit is raised to the power the power applies to the whole
multiple not just the unit."
2. Rules for Unit Names:
o "Unit names are normally printed in roman (upright) type, and they are treated
like ordinary nouns."
o "In English, the names of units start with a lower-case letter (even when the
symbol for the unit begins with a capital letter), except at the beginning of a
sentence or in capitalized material such as a title. For example joule J, hertz Hz,
metre m, second s and ampere A."
o "When the name of a unit is combined with the name of a multiple or sub-
multiple prefix, no space or hyphen is used between the prefix name and the unit
name. The combination of prefix name plus unit name is a single word. For
example milligram, but not milli-gram and kilopascal, but not kilo-pascal."
3. Expressing Quantities:
o "Although the values of quantities are normally expressed using symbols for
numbers and symbols for units, if for some reason the unit name is more
appropriate than the unit symbol, the unit name should be spelled out in full. For
example 2.1 m/s, or 2.1 metres per second."
4. Errors in Measurement:
o "Error is the doubt that exists about the result of any measurement. For every
measurement (even the most careful) there is always a margin of doubt which is
called error."
o "Thus every measurement is approximate due to errors in measurement."
5. Types of Errors:
o "The errors in measurement can be broadly classified as (a) systematic errors and
(b) random errors."
o "Systematic errors: The systematic errors are those errors that tend to be in one
direction, either positive or negative. Some of the sources of systematic errors
are:"
"(a) Instrumental errors arise from the errors due to imperfect design or
calibration of the measuring instrument, zero error in the instrument,
etc."
1. Personal Errors (Systematic Errors):
o "(b) Personal errors arise due to an individual's bias, lack of proper setting of the
apparatus or individual's carelessness in taking observations without observing
proper precautions, etc."
2. Minimizing Systematic Errors:
o "Systematic errors can be minimized by improving experimental techniques,
selecting better instruments and removing personal bias as far as possible. For a
given set-up, these errors may be estimated to a certain extent and the
necessary corrections may be applied to the readings."
3. Random Errors:
o "B. Random errors: The random errors are those errors, which occur irregularly
and hence are random with respect to sign and size."
o "These can arise due to random and unpredictable fluctuations in experimental
conditions (e.g. changes in temperature, humidity, wind velocity, etc), personal
(unbiased) errors by the observer taking readings, etc."
o "For example, when the same person repeats the same observation, it is very
likely that he may get different readings every time."
Key Takeaways:
Systematic errors include personal errors from observer bias or carelessness
Systematic errors can be reduced through better techniques and instruments
Random errors are unpredictable variations due to environmental factors or inherent
measurement variability
Random errors are evident when repeated measurements give different results
Proper formatting rules for unit names (lowercase, roman type, no hyphens with
prefixes)
The concept that powers apply to the entire unit multiple
Fundamental definition and classification of measurement errors
Specific examples of systematic errors (instrumental errors)