Physics and Physical Measurement
1. Fundamental Units – seven basic units of the SI measurement system: kilogram, second, mole, meter, ampere, Kelvin, candela.
2. Derived Units – units that are combinations of fundamental units. These combinations may or may not have a separate name. (eg. 1 kg m/s2 = 1 N)
3. Accuracy - An indication of how close a measurement is to the accepted value (a measure of correctness).
4. Precision - An indication of the agreement among a number of measurements made in the same way (a measure of exactness).
5. Random Uncertainty - An uncertainty produced by unknown and unpredictable variations in the experimental situation, such as temperature fluctuations and estimations when reading instruments. (Affects the precision of results - Can be reduced by taking repeated trials but not eliminated – shows up as error bars on a graph)
6. Systematic Error - An error associated with a particular instrument or experimental technique that causes the measured value to be off by the same amount each time. (Affects the accuracy of results - Can be eliminated by fixing source of error – shows up as non-zero y-intercept on a graph)
7. Vector – a quantity with both a magnitude and a direction
8. Scalar – a quantity with magnitude only
Mechanics
9. *Displacement (s) - distance traveled from a fixed point in a particular direction
10. *Velocity (u,v) - rate of change of displacement
11. *Speed (u,v) - rate of change of distance
12. *Acceleration (a) - rate of change of velocity
13. *Newton’s First Law of Motion – An object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion remains in motion at a constant speed in a straight line unless acted on by an unbalanced force.
14. *Newton’s Second Law of Motion – An unbalanced force will cause an object to accelerate in the direction of the net force. The acceleration of the object is proportional to the net force and