Revision as of 20:52, 28 April 2018 editFresheneesz (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users9,061 edits adding aka name "significant digits"← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 14:41, 19 December 2024 edit undoElectricmic (talk | contribs)351 edits →Significant figures in writing uncertainty: moving to implied uncertainty section | ||
(455 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Any digit of a number within its measurement resolution, as opposed to spurious digits}} | |||
{{distinguish|Significant Figures (book)}} | |||
{{Redir|First digit|the body part|First digit (anatomy)}} | |||
{{More citations needed|date=July 2013|talk=Problems}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2019|cs1-dates=y}} | |||
{{Order-of-approx}} | {{Order-of-approx}} | ||
{{Refimprove|date=July 2013|talk=Problems}} | |||
The '''significant figures''' (also known as the '''significant digits''') of a number are ] that carry meaning contributing to its ]. This includes all digits ''except'':<ref>''Chemistry in the Community''; Kendall-Hunt:Dubuque, IA 1988</ref> | |||
* All ]; | |||
* ] when they are merely placeholders to indicate the scale of the number (exact rules are explained at ]); and | |||
* ] digits introduced, for example, by calculations carried out to greater precision than that of the original data, or measurements reported to a greater precision than the equipment supports. | |||
'''Significant figures''', also referred to as '''significant digits''' or '''sig figs''', are specific ] within a number written in ] that carry both reliability and necessity in conveying a particular quantity. When presenting the outcome of a measurement (such as length, pressure, volume, or mass), if the number of digits exceeds what the measurement instrument can resolve, only the number of digits within the ]'s capability are dependable and therefore considered significant. | |||
] are approximate rules for roughly maintaining significance throughout a computation. The more sophisticated scientific rules are known as ]. | |||
For instance, if a length measurement yields 114.8 mm, using a ruler with the smallest interval between marks at 1 mm, the first three digits (1, 1, and 4, representing 114 mm) are certain and constitute significant figures. Further, digits that are uncertain yet meaningful are also included in the significant figures. In this example, the last digit (8, contributing 0.8 mm) is likewise considered significant despite its uncertainty.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Lower |first=Stephen |date=2021-03-31 |title=Significant Figures and Rounding |url=https://chem.libretexts.org/@go/page/3555 |website=Chemistry - LibreTexts}}</ref> Therefore, this measurement contains four significant figures. | |||
Numbers are often ] to avoid reporting insignificant figures. For example, it would create ] to express a measurement as 12.34500 kg (which has seven significant figures) if the scales only measured to the nearest gram and gave a reading of 12.345 kg (which has five significant figures). Numbers can also be rounded merely for simplicity rather than to indicate a given precision of measurement, for example, to make them faster to pronounce in news broadcasts. | |||
Another example involves a volume measurement of 2.98 L with an uncertainty of ± 0.05 L. The actual volume falls between 2.93 L and 3.03 L. Even if certain digits are not completely known, they are still significant if they are meaningful, as they indicate the actual volume within an acceptable range of uncertainty. In this case, the actual volume might be 2.94 L or possibly 3.02 L, so all three digits are considered significant.<ref name=":0" /> Thus, there are three significant figures in this example. | |||
==Identifying significant figures== | |||
The following types of digits are not considered significant:<ref>''Chemistry in the Community''; Kendall-Hunt:Dubuque, IA 1988</ref> | |||
===Concise rules=== | |||
*All non-zero digits are significant: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. | |||
*Zeros between non-zero digits are significant: 102, 2005, 50009. | |||
*Leading zeros are never significant: 0.02, 001.887, 0.000515. | |||
*In a number ''with'' a decimal point, trailing zeros (those to the right of the last non-zero digit) are significant: 2.02000, 5.400, 57.5400. | |||
*In a number ''without'' a decimal point, trailing zeros may or may not be significant. More information through additional graphical symbols or explicit information on errors is needed to clarify the significance of trailing zeros. | |||
* ]s. For instance, 013 kg has two significant figures—1 and 3—while the leading zero is insignificant since it does not impact the mass indication; 013 kg is equivalent to 13 kg, rendering the zero unnecessary. Similarly, in the case of 0.056 m, there are two insignificant leading zeros since 0.056 m is the same as 56 mm, thus the leading zeros do not contribute to the length indication. | |||
===Significant figures rules explained=== | |||
* ]s when they serve as placeholders. In the measurement 1500 m, when the measurement resolution is 100 m, the trailing zeros are insignificant as they simply stand for the tens and ones places. In this instance, 1500 m indicates the length is approximately 1500 m rather than an exact value of 1500 m. | |||
Specifically, the rules for identifying significant figures when writing or interpreting numbers are as follows:<ref>Giving a precise definition for the number of correct significant digits is surprisingly subtle, see {{cite book |first= Nicholas |last= Higham |title= Accuracy and Stability of Numerical Algorithms |edition= 2nd |publisher= SIAM |year= 2002 |pages = 3–5 | url=http://ftp.demec.ufpr.br/CFD/bibliografia/Higham_2002_Accuracy%20and%20Stability%20of%20Numerical%20Algorithms.pdf}}</ref> | |||
* ] digits that arise from calculations resulting in a higher precision than the original data or a measurement reported with greater precision than the instrument's resolution. | |||
*All non-zero digits are considered significant. For example, 91 has two significant figures (9 and 1), while 123.45 has five significant figures (1, 2, 3, 4 and 5). | |||
*Zeros appearing anywhere between two non-zero digits are significant. Example: 101.1203 has seven significant figures: 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 0 and 3. | |||
A zero after a decimal (e.g., 1.0) is significant, and care should be used when appending such a decimal of zero. Thus, in the case of 1.0, there are two significant figures, whereas 1 (without a decimal) has one significant figure. | |||
*Leading zeros are not significant. For example, 0.00052 has two significant figures: 5 and 2. | |||
*Trailing zeros in a number containing a decimal point are significant. For example, 12.2300 has six significant figures: 1, 2, 2, 3, 0 and 0. The number 0.000122300 still has only six significant figures (the zeros before the 1 are not significant). In addition, 120.00 has five significant figures since it has three trailing zeros. This convention clarifies the precision of such numbers; for example, if a measurement precise to four decimal places (0.0001) is given as 12.23 then it might be understood that only two decimal places of precision are available. Stating the result as 12.2300 makes clear that it is precise to four decimal places (in this case, six significant figures). | |||
Among a number's significant digits, the '''most significant digit''' is the one with the greatest exponent value (the leftmost significant digit/figure), while the '''least significant digit''' is the one with the lowest exponent value (the rightmost significant digit/figure). For example, in the number "123" the "1" is the most significant digit, representing hundreds (10<sup>2</sup>), while the "3" is the least significant digit, representing ones (10<sup>0</sup>). | |||
*The significance of trailing zeros in a number not containing a decimal point can be ambiguous. For example, it may not always be clear if a number like 1300 is precise to the nearest unit (and just happens coincidentally to be an exact multiple of a hundred) or if it is only shown to the nearest hundred due to rounding or uncertainty. Many conventions exist to address this issue: | |||
To avoid conveying a misleading level of precision, numbers are often ]. For instance, it would create ] to present a measurement as 12.34525 kg when the measuring instrument only provides accuracy to the nearest gram (0.001 kg). In this case, the significant figures are the first five digits (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) from the leftmost digit, and the number should be rounded to these significant figures, resulting in 12.345 kg as the accurate value. The ] (in this example, 0.00025 kg = 0.25 g) approximates the numerical resolution or precision. Numbers can also be rounded for simplicity, not necessarily to indicate measurement precision, such as for the sake of expediency in news broadcasts. | |||
Significance arithmetic encompasses a set of approximate rules for preserving significance through calculations. More advanced scientific rules are known as the ]. | |||
] 10 (base-10, decimal numbers) is assumed in the following. (See ] for extending these concepts to other bases.) | |||
== Identifying significant figures == | |||
{{Refimprove section|date=May 2021}} | |||
=== Rules to identify significant figures in a number === | |||
] | |||
Identifying the significant figures in a number requires knowing which digits are meaningful, which requires knowing the resolution with which the number is measured, obtained, or processed. For example, if the measurable smallest mass is 0.001 g, then in a measurement given as 0.00234 g the "4" is not useful and should be discarded, while the "3" is useful and should often be retained.<ref>Giving a precise definition for the number of correct significant digits is not a straightforward matter: see {{cite book|last=Higham|first=Nicholas|url=http://ftp.demec.ufpr.br/CFD/bibliografia/Higham_2002_Accuracy%20and%20Stability%20of%20Numerical%20Algorithms.pdf|title=Accuracy and Stability of Numerical Algorithms|publisher=SIAM|year=2002|edition=2nd|pages=3–5}}</ref> | |||
*'''Non-zero digits within the given measurement or reporting resolution''' are '''significant'''. | |||
**91 has two significant figures (9 and 1) if they are measurement-allowed digits. | |||
**123.45 has five significant digits (1, 2, 3, 4 and 5) if they are within the measurement resolution. If the resolution is, say, 0.1, then the 5 shows that the true value to 4 sig figs is equally likely to be 123.4 or 123.5. | |||
*'''Zeros between two significant non-zero digits''' are '''significant (''significant'' ''trapped zeros)'''''. | |||
**101.12003 consists of eight significant figures if the resolution is to 0.00001. | |||
**125.340006 has seven significant figures if the resolution is to 0.0001: 1, 2, 5, 3, 4, 0, and 0. | |||
*'''Zeros to the left of the first non-zero digit''' (]s) are '''<u>not</u> significant'''. | |||
**If a length measurement gives 0.052 km, then 0.052 km = 52 m so 5 and 2 are only significant; the leading zeros appear or disappear, depending on which unit is used, so they are not necessary to indicate the measurement scale. | |||
**0.00034 has 2 significant figures (3 and 4) if the resolution is 0.00001. | |||
*'''Zeros to the right of the last non-zero digit (]s) in a number with the decimal point''' are '''significant''' if they are within the measurement or reporting resolution. | |||
**1.200 has four significant figures (1, 2, 0, and 0) if they are allowed by the measurement resolution. | |||
**0.0980 has three significant digits (9, 8, and the last zero) if they are within the measurement resolution. | |||
**120.000 consists of six significant figures (1, 2, and the four subsequent zeroes) if, as before, they are within the measurement resolution. | |||
*'''Trailing zeros in an integer''' '''may or may <u>not</u> be significant''', depending on the measurement or reporting resolution. | |||
**45,600 has 3, 4 or 5 significant figures depending on how the last zeros are used. For example, if the length of a road is reported as 45600 m without information about the reporting or measurement resolution, then it is not clear if the road length is precisely measured as 45600 m or if it is a rough estimate. If it is the rough estimation, then only the first three non-zero digits are significant since the trailing zeros are neither reliable nor necessary; 45600 m can be expressed as 45.6 km or as 4.56 × 10<sup>4</sup> m in ], and neither expression requires the trailing zeros. | |||
*'''An exact number has an infinite number of significant figures.''' | |||
**If the number of apples in a bag is 4 (exact number), then this number is 4.0000... (with infinite trailing zeros to the right of the decimal point). As a result, 4 does not impact the number of significant figures or digits in the result of calculations with it. | |||
*'''A mathematical or physical constant has significant figures to its known digits.''' | |||
**''π'' is a specific ] with several equivalent definitions. All of the digits in its exact decimal expansion 3.14159265358979323... are significant. Although many properties of these digits are known — for example, they do not repeat, because ''π'' is irrational — not all of the digits are known. As of March 2024, more than 102 trillion digits<ref></ref> have been calculated. A 102 trillion-digit approximation has 102 trillion significant digits. In practical applications, far fewer digits are used. The everyday approximation 3.14 has three significant figures and 7 correct ] digits. The approximation 22/7 has the same three correct decimal digits but has 10 correct binary digits. Most calculators and computer programs can handle the 16-digit expansion 3.141592653589793, which is sufficient for interplanetary navigation calculations.<ref name="NASA/JPL">{{Cite web|title=How Many Decimals of Pi Do We Really Need? - Edu News|url=https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/news/2016/3/16/how-many-decimals-of-pi-do-we-really-need/|access-date=2021-10-25|website=NASA/JPL Edu}}</ref> | |||
**The ] is <math>h=6.62607015\times10^{-34} \mathrm{J}\cdot \mathrm{s}</math> and is defined as an exact value so that it is more properly defined as <math>h=6.62607015(0)\times10^{-34} \mathrm{J}\cdot \mathrm{s}</math>.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/CGPM-2018/26th-CGPM-Resolutions.pdf|date=2018-11-16|work=BIPM|access-date=2018-11-20|language=en-GB|title=Resolutions of the 26th CGPM|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181119214326/https://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/CGPM-2018/26th-CGPM-Resolutions.pdf|archive-date=2018-11-19|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
=== Ways to denote significant figures in an integer with trailing zeros === | |||
The significance of trailing zeros in a number not containing a decimal point can be ambiguous. For example, it may not always be clear if the number 1300 is precise to the nearest unit (just happens coincidentally to be an exact multiple of a hundred) or if it is only shown to the nearest hundreds due to rounding or uncertainty. Many conventions exist to address this issue. However, these are not universally used and would only be effective if the reader is familiar with the convention: | |||
:*An ], sometimes also called an overbar, or less accurately, a ], may be placed over the last significant figure; any trailing zeros following this are insignificant. For example, 13{{overline|0}}0 has three significant figures (and hence indicates that the number is precise to the nearest ten). | :*An ], sometimes also called an overbar, or less accurately, a ], may be placed over the last significant figure; any trailing zeros following this are insignificant. For example, 13{{overline|0}}0 has three significant figures (and hence indicates that the number is precise to the nearest ten). | ||
:*Less often, using a closely related convention, the last significant figure of a number may be ]d; for example, " |
:*Less often, using a closely related convention, the last significant figure of a number may be ]d; for example, "1<span style="text-decoration: underline;">3</span>00" has two significant figures. | ||
:*A decimal point may be placed after the number; for example " |
:*A decimal point may be placed after the number; for example "1300." indicates specifically that trailing zeros are meant to be significant.<ref name="Chemistry Significant Figures">{{cite book |last1= Myers |first1= R. Thomas |last2= Oldham |first2= Keith B. |last3= Tocci |first3= Salvatore |title= Chemistry |year= 2000 |publisher= Holt Rinehart Winston |location= Austin, Texas |isbn= 0-03-052002-9 |page= |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/holtchemistryvis00myer/page/59}}</ref> | ||
As the conventions above are not in general use, the following more widely recognized options are available for indicating the significance of number with trailing zeros: | |||
:*In the combination of a number and a ], the ambiguity can be avoided by choosing a suitable ]. For example, the number of significant figures in a mass specified as 1300 g is ambiguous, while in a mass of 13 ]g or 1.3 kg it is not. | |||
:*Eliminate ambiguous or non-significant zeros by changing the ] in a number with a ]. For example, the precision of measurement specified as 1300 g is ambiguous, while if stated as 1.30 kg it is not. Likewise 0.0123 L can be rewritten as 12.3 mL. | |||
:However, these conventions are not universally used, and it is often necessary to determine from context whether such trailing zeros are intended to be significant. If all else fails, the level of rounding can be specified explicitly. The abbreviation s.f. is sometimes used, for example "20 000 to 2 s.f." or "20 000 (2 sf)". Alternatively, the uncertainty can be stated separately and explicitly with a ], as in 20 000 ± 1%, so that significant-figures rules do not apply. This also allows specifying a precision in-between powers of ten (or whatever the base power of the numbering system is). | |||
:*Eliminate ambiguous or non-significant zeros by using Scientific Notation: For example, 1300 with three significant figures becomes {{val|1.30|e=3}}. Likewise 0.0123 can be rewritten as {{val|1.23|e=-2}}. The part of the representation that contains the significant figures (1.30 or 1.23) is known as the ] or mantissa. The digits in the base and exponent ({{val||e=3}} or {{val||e=-2}}) are considered exact numbers so for these digits, significant figures are irrelevant. | |||
===Scientific notation=== | |||
In most cases, the same rules apply to numbers expressed in ]. However, in the normalized form of that notation, placeholder leading and trailing digits do not occur, so all digits are significant. For example, {{val|0.00012}} (two significant figures) becomes {{val|1.2|e=-4}}, and {{val|0.00122300}} (six significant figures) becomes {{val|1.22300|e=-3}}. In particular, the potential ambiguity about the significance of trailing zeros is eliminated. For example, {{val|1300}} to four significant figures is written as {{val|1.300|e=3}}, while {{val|1300}} to two significant figures is written as {{val|1.3|e=3}}. | |||
:*Explicitly state the number of significant figures (the abbreviation s.f. is sometimes used): For example "20 000 to 2 s.f." or "20 000 (2 sf)". | |||
:*State the expected variability (precision) explicitly with a ], as in 20 000 ± 1%. This also allows specifying a range of precision in-between powers of ten. | |||
==Rounding and decimal places== | |||
== Rounding to significant figures == | |||
The basic concept of significant figures is often used in connection with ]. Rounding to significant figures is a more general-purpose technique than rounding to ''n'' decimal places, since it handles numbers of different scales in a uniform way. For example, the population of a city might only be known to the nearest thousand and be stated as 52,000, while the population of a country might only be known to the nearest million and be stated as 52,000,000. The former might be in error by hundreds, and the latter might be in error by hundreds of thousands, but both have two significant figures (5 and 2). This reflects the fact that the significance of the error (its likely size relative to the size of the quantity being measured) is the same in both cases. | |||
] to significant figures is a more general-purpose technique than rounding to ''n'' digits, since it handles numbers of different scales in a uniform way. For example, the population of a city might only be known to the nearest thousand and be stated as 52,000, while the population of a country might only be known to the nearest million and be stated as 52,000,000. The former might be in error by hundreds, and the latter might be in error by hundreds of thousands, but both have two significant figures (5 and 2). This reflects the fact that the significance of the error is the same in both cases, relative to the size of the quantity being measured. | |||
To round to ''n'' significant figures:<ref>{{cite web | To round a number to ''n'' significant figures:<ref>{{cite web | ||
|title = Rounding Decimal Numbers to a Designated Precision | |title = Rounding Decimal Numbers to a Designated Precision | ||
|author = Engelbrecht, Nancy |
|author = Engelbrecht, Nancy|display-authors=etal | ||
|year = 1990 | |year = 1990 | ||
|publisher = U.S. Department of Education | |publisher = U.S. Department of Education | ||
|location = Washington, D.C. | |location = Washington, D.C. | ||
|url = https://archive.org/download/ERIC_ED327701/ERIC_ED327701.pdf | |url = https://archive.org/download/ERIC_ED327701/ERIC_ED327701.pdf | ||
}}</ref><ref name="Numerical Mathematics and Computing, by Cheney and Kincaid">.</ref> | |||
# If the ''n'' + 1 digit is greater than 5 or is 5 followed by other non-zero digits, add 1 to the ''n'' digit. For example, if we want to round 1.2459 to 3 significant figures, then this step results in 1.25. | |||
* Identify the significant figures before rounding. These are the ''n'' consecutive digits beginning with the first non-zero digit. | |||
# If the ''n'' + 1 digit is 5 not followed by other digits or followed by only zeros, then rounding requires a ] rule. For example, to round 1.25 to 2 significant figures: | |||
#* ] rounds up to 1.3. This is the default rounding method implied in many disciplines{{Citation needed|date=August 2018|reason=How many, and which, disciplines?}} if the required rounding method is not specified. | |||
* If the digit immediately to the right of the last significant figure is a 5 not followed by any other digits or followed only by zeros, rounding requires a ] rule. For example, to round 1.25 to 2 significant figures: | |||
#* ], which rounds to the nearest even number. With this method, 1.25 is rounded down to 1.2. If this method applies to 1.35, then it is rounded up to 1.4. This is the method preferred by many scientific disciplines, because, for example, it avoids skewing the average value of a long list of values upwards. | |||
# For an integer in rounding, replace the digits after the ''n'' digit with zeros. For example, if 1254 is rounded to 2 significant figures, then 5 and 4 are replaced to 0 so that it will be 1300. For a number with the decimal point in rounding, remove the digits after the ''n'' digit. For example, if 14.895 is rounded to 3 significant figures, then the digits after 8 are removed so that it will be 14.9. | |||
** ], which rounds to the nearest even number, rounds down to 1.2 in this case. The same strategy applied to 1.35 would instead round up to 1.4. | |||
* Replace non-significant figures in front of the decimal point by zeros. | |||
* Drop all the digits after the decimal point to the right of the significant figures (do not replace them with zeros). | |||
In financial calculations, a number is often rounded to a given number of places |
In financial calculations, a number is often rounded to a given number of places. For example, to two places after the ] for many world currencies. This is done because greater precision is immaterial, and usually it is not possible to settle a debt of less than the smallest currency unit. | ||
In UK personal tax returns |
In UK personal tax returns, income is rounded down to the nearest pound, whilst tax paid is calculated to the nearest penny. | ||
As an illustration, the ] quantity '''12.345''' can be expressed with various numbers of significant |
As an illustration, the ] quantity '''12.345''' can be expressed with various numbers of significant figures or decimal places. If insufficient precision is available then the number is ] in some manner to fit the available precision. The following table shows the results for various total precision at two rounding ways (N/A stands for Not Applicable). | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Precision !! Rounded to<br />significant figures !! Rounded to<br />decimal places | |||
! <br>Precision | |||
! Rounded to<br>significant figures | |||
! Rounded to<br>decimal places | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |6 | ||
| 12.3450 | |||
| 12.345000 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |5 | ||
| 12.345 | |||
| 12.34500 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |4 | ||
| |
| 12.34 or 12.35 | ||
| 12.3450 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |3 | ||
| 12.3 | |||
| 12.345 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |2 | ||
| 12 | |||
| |
| 12.34 or 12.35 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |1 || 10 || 12.3 | ||
| align=left | 10 | |||
| align=left | 12.3 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |0 || {{n/a}} || 12 | ||
| align=left {{n/a}} | |||
| align=left | 12 | |||
|} | |} | ||
Another example for '''0.012345''' |
Another example for '''0.012345'''. (Remember that the leading zeros are not significant.) | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Precision !! Rounded to<br />significant figures !! Rounded to<br />decimal places | |||
! <br>Precision | |||
! Rounded to<br>significant figures | |||
! Rounded to<br>decimal places | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |7 | ||
| 0.01234500 | |||
| 0.0123450 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |6 | ||
| 0.0123450 | |||
| 0.012345 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |5 | ||
| 0.012345 | |||
| |
| 0.01234 or 0.01235 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |4 | ||
| |
| 0.01234 or 0.01235 | ||
| 0.0123 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |3 | ||
| 0.0123 | |||
| 0.012 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |2 | ||
| 0.012 | |||
| 0.01 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |1 | ||
| 0.01 | |||
| 0.0 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| style=text-align:center |0 || {{n/a}} || 0 | ||
| align=left {{n/a}} | |||
| align=left | 0 | |||
|} | |} | ||
The representation of a |
The representation of a non-zero number ''x'' to a precision of ''p'' significant digits has a numerical value that is given by the formula:{{Citation needed|date=July 2017}} | ||
:<math>10^n \cdot \operatorname{round}\left(\frac{x}{10^n}\right)</math> | |||
:](10<sup>''−n''</sup>⋅''x'')⋅10<sup>''n''</sup>, where ''n'' = ](log<sub>10</sub> ''x'') + 1 − ''p''. | |||
:where | |||
For negative numbers, the formula can be used on the ]; for zero, no transformation is necessary. Note that the result may need to be written with one of the above conventions explained in the section "Identifying significant figures" to indicate the actual number of significant digits if the result includes for example trailing significant zeros. | |||
:<math>n=\lfloor \log_{10} (|x|) \rfloor + 1 - p</math> | |||
which may need to be written with a specific marking as detailed ] to specify the number of significant trailing zeros. | |||
== Writing uncertainty and implied uncertainty == | |||
==Arithmetic== | |||
=== Significant figures in writing uncertainty === | |||
{{Main|Significance arithmetic}} | |||
It is recommended for a measurement result to include the measurement uncertainty such as <math>x_{best}\pm\sigma_{x}</math>, where ''x<sub>best</sub>'' and ''σ<sub>x</sub>'' are the best estimate and uncertainty in the measurement respectively.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Luna|first=Eduardo|title=Uncertainties and Significant Figures|url=https://www.deanza.edu/faculty/lunaeduardo/documents/UncertaintyandSignificantFig.pdf|website=DeAnza College}}</ref> ''x<sub>best</sub>'' can be the average of measured values and ''σ<sub>x</sub>'' can be the standard deviation or a multiple of the measurement deviation. The rules to write <math>x_{best}\pm\sigma_{x}</math>are:<ref>{{Cite web|title=Significant Figures|url=https://web.ics.purdue.edu/~lewicki/physics218/significant|website=Purdue University - Department of Physics and Astronomy}}</ref> | |||
As there are rules for determining the number of significant figures in directly ''measured'' quantities, there are rules for determining the number of significant figures in quantities ''calculated'' from these ''measured'' quantities. | |||
* ''σ<sub>x</sub>'' should usually be quoted to only one or two significant figures, as more precision is unlikely to be reliable or meaningful: | |||
Only ''measured'' quantities figure into the determination of the number of significant figures in ''calculated quantities''. Exact mathematical quantities like the {{math|π}} in the formula for the ] with radius {{math|''r''}}, {{math|π''r''<sup>2</sup>}} has no effect on the number of significant figures in the final calculated area. Similarly the {{math|½}} in the formula for the ] of a mass {{math|''m''}} with velocity {{math|''v''}}, {{math|½''mv''<sup>2</sup>}}, has no bearing on the number of significant figures in the final calculated kinetic energy. The constants {{math|π}} and {{math|½}} are considered to have an ''infinite'' number of significant figures. | |||
** 1.79 ± 0.06 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.96 (correct), 1.79 ± 1.96 (incorrect). | |||
* The digit positions of the last significant figures in ''x<sub>best</sub>'' and ''σ<sub>x</sub>'' are the same, otherwise the consistency is lost. For example, "1.79 ± 0.067" is incorrect, as it does not make sense to have more accurate uncertainty than the best estimate. | |||
** 1.79 ± 0.06 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.96 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.067 (incorrect). | |||
=== Implied uncertainty === | |||
For quantities created from measured quantities by '''multiplication''' and '''division''', the calculated result should have as many significant figures as the ''measured'' number with the ''least'' number of significant figures. For example, | |||
] | |||
:1.234 × 2.0 = 2.{{overline|4}}68… ≈ 2.5, | |||
with only ''two'' significant figures. The first factor has four significant figures and the second has two significant figures. The factor with the least number of significant figures is the second one with only two, so the final calculated result should also have a total of two significant figures. | |||
Uncertainty may be implied by the last significant figure if it is not explicitly expressed.<ref name=":0" /> The implied uncertainty is ± the half of the minimum scale at the last significant figure position. For example, if the mass of an object is reported as 3.78 kg without mentioning uncertainty, then ± 0.005 kg measurement uncertainty may be implied. If the mass of an object is estimated as 3.78 ± 0.07 kg, so the actual mass is probably somewhere in the range 3.71 to 3.85 kg, and it is desired to report it with a single number, then 3.8 kg is the best number to report since its implied uncertainty ± 0.05 kg gives a mass range of 3.75 to 3.85 kg, which is close to the measurement range. If the uncertainty is a bit larger, i.e. 3.78 ± 0.09 kg, then 3.8 kg is still the best single number to quote, since if "4 kg" was reported then a lot of information would be lost. | |||
For quantities created from measured quantities by '''addition''' and '''subtraction''', the last significant ] (hundreds, tens, ones, tenths, and so forth) in the calculated result should be the same as the ''leftmost'' or largest ''decimal place'' of the last significant figure out of all the ''measured'' quantities in the terms of the sum. For example, | |||
:100.0 + 1.234 = 101.{{overline|2}}34… ≈ 101.2 | |||
with the last significant figure in the ''tenths'' place. The first term has its last significant figure in the tenths place and the second term has its last significant figure in the thousandths place. The leftmost of the decimal places of the last significant figure out of all the terms of the sum is the tenths place from the first term, so the calculated result should also have its last significant figure in the tenths place. | |||
If there is a need to write the implied uncertainty of a number, then it can be written as <math>x\pm\sigma_{x}</math>with stating it as the implied uncertainty (to prevent readers from recognizing it as the measurement uncertainty), where ''x'' and ''σ<sub>x</sub>'' are the number with an extra zero digit (to follow the rules to write uncertainty above) and the implied uncertainty of it respectively. For example, 6 kg with the implied uncertainty ± 0.5 kg can be stated as 6.0 ± 0.5 kg. | |||
The rules for calculating significant figures for multiplication and division are opposite to the rules for addition and subtraction. For multiplication and division, only the total number of significant figures in each of the factors matter; the decimal place of the last significant figure in each factor is irrelevant. For addition and subtraction, only the decimal place of the last significant figure in each of the terms matters; the total number of significant figures in each term is irrelevant. | |||
== Arithmetic == | |||
<!-- see ] for details --> | |||
In a ] 10 ] of a ], the result should be rounded to the number of significant figures in the normalized number. For example, log<sub>10</sub>(3.000×10<sup>4</sup>) = log<sub>10</sub>(10<sup>4</sup>) + log<sub>10</sub>(3.000) ≈ 4 + 0.47712125472, should be rounded to 4.4771. | |||
As there are rules to determine the significant figures in directly ''measured'' quantities, there are also guidelines (not rules) to determine the significant figures in quantities ''calculated'' from these ''measured'' quantities. | |||
When taking antilogarithms, the resulting number should have as many significant figures as the ] in the logarithm. | |||
Significant figures in ''measured'' quantities are most important in the determination of significant figures in ''calculated quantities'' with them. A mathematical or physical constant (e.g., {{math|π}} in the formula for the ] with radius {{math|''r''}} as {{math|π''r''<sup>2</sup>}}) has no effect on the determination of the significant figures in the result of a calculation with it if its known digits are equal to or more than the significant figures in the measured quantities used in the calculation. An exact number such as {{math|½}} in the formula for the ] of a mass {{math|''m''}} with velocity {{math|''v''}} as {{math|½''mv''<sup>2</sup>}} has no bearing on the significant figures in the calculated kinetic energy since its number of significant figures is infinite (0.500000...). | |||
When performing a calculation, do not follow these guidelines for intermediate results; keep as many digits as is practical (at least 1 more than implied by the precision of the final result) until the end of calculation to avoid cumulative rounding errors.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~vsanni/ph3/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements.pdf |format= PDF |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20130618184216/http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~vsanni/ph3/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements.pdf |archivedate= June 18, 2013 |title= Measurements and Significant Figures (Draft) |first= Virgínio |last= de Oliveira Sannibale |year= 2001 |work= Freshman Physics Laboratory |publisher= California Institute of Technology, Physics Mathematics And Astronomy Division }}</ref> | |||
The guidelines described below are intended to avoid a calculation result more precise than the measured quantities, but it does not ensure the resulted implied uncertainty close enough to the measured uncertainties. This problem can be seen in unit conversion. If the guidelines give the implied uncertainty too far from the measured ones, then it may be needed to decide significant digits that give comparable uncertainty. | |||
==Estimating tenths== | |||
When using a ruler, initially use the smallest mark as the first estimated digit. For example, if a ruler's smallest mark is cm, and 4.5 cm is read, it is 4.5 (±0.1 cm) or 4.4 – 4.6 cm. | |||
=== Multiplication and division === | |||
It is possible that the overall length of a ruler may not be accurate to the degree of the smallest mark and the marks may be imperfectly spaced within each unit. However assuming a normal good quality ruler, it should be possible to estimate tenths between the nearest two marks to achieve an extra decimal place of accuracy. Failing to do this adds the error in reading the ruler to any error in the calibration of the ruler.<ref name="UMmeasurements">{{cite web|title=Measurements|url=http://slc.umd.umich.edu/slconline/SIGF/page7.html|website=slc.umd.umich.edu|publisher=University of Michigan|accessdate=3 July 2017}}</ref><ref name="Weston">{{cite book|title=Experimental Electrical Testing|date=1914|publisher=Weston Electrical Instruments Co.|location=Newark, NJ|page=9|accessdate=3 July 2017}}</ref> | |||
For quantities created from measured quantities via '''multiplication''' and '''division''', the calculated result should have as many significant figures as the ''least'' number of significant figures among the measured quantities used in the calculation.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://chemistry.bd.psu.edu/jircitano/sigfigs.html|title=Significant Figure Rules|publisher=Penn State University}}</ref> For example, | |||
:* 1.234 × 2 = {{overline|2}}.468 ≈ 2 | |||
:* 1.234 × 2.0 = 2.{{overline|4}}68 ≈ 2.5 | |||
:* 0.01234 × 2 = 0.0{{overline|2}}468 ≈ 0.02 | |||
:* 0.012345678 / 0.00234 = 5.2{{overline|7}}59 ≈ 5.28 | |||
with ''one'', ''two'', and ''one'' significant figures respectively. (2 here is assumed not an exact number.) For the first example, the first multiplication factor has four significant figures and the second has one significant figure. The factor with the fewest or least significant figures is the second one with only one, so the final calculated result should also have one significant figure. | |||
== |
==== Exception ==== | ||
For unit conversion, the implied uncertainty of the result can be unsatisfactorily higher than that in the previous unit if this rounding guideline is followed; For example, 8 inch has the implied uncertainty of ± 0.5 inch = ± 1.27 cm. If it is converted to the centimeter scale and the rounding guideline for multiplication and division is followed, then {{overline|2}}0.32 cm ≈ 20 cm with the implied uncertainty of ± 5 cm. If this implied uncertainty is considered as too overestimated, then more proper significant digits in the unit conversion result may be 2{{overline|0}}.32 cm ≈ 20. cm with the implied uncertainty of ± 0.5 cm. | |||
Another exception of applying the above rounding guideline is to multiply a number by an integer, such as 1.234 × 9. If the above guideline is followed, then the result is rounded as 1.234 × 9.000.... = 11.1{{overline|0}}6 ≈ 11.11. However, this multiplication is essentially adding 1.234 to itself 9 times such as 1.234 + 1.234 + … + 1.234 so the rounding guideline for addition and subtraction described below is more proper rounding approach.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2017-06-16|title=Uncertainty in Measurement- Significant Figures|url=https://chem.libretexts.org/@go/page/83744|website=Chemistry - LibreTexts}}</ref> As a result, the final answer is 1.234 + 1.234 + … + 1.234 = 11.10{{overline|6}} = 11.106 (one significant digit increase). | |||
=== Addition and subtraction of significant figures === | |||
For quantities created from measured quantities via '''addition''' and '''subtraction''', the last significant figure position (e.g., hundreds, tens, ones, tenths, hundredths, and so forth) in the calculated result should be the same as the ''leftmost'' or largest digit position among the last significant figures of the ''measured'' quantities in the calculation. For example, | |||
:* 1.234 + 2 = {{overline|3}}.234 ≈ 3 | |||
:* 1.234 + 2.0 = 3.{{overline|2}}34 ≈ 3.2 | |||
:* 0.01234 + 2 = {{overline|2}}.01234 ≈ 2 | |||
:* 12000 + 77 = 1{{overline|2}}077 ≈ 12000 | |||
with the last significant figures in the ''ones'' place, ''tenths'' place, ''ones'' place, and ''thousands'' place respectively. (2 here is assumed not an exact number.) For the first example, the first term has its last significant figure in the thousandths place and the second term has its last significant figure in the ''ones'' place. The leftmost or largest digit position among the last significant figures of these terms is the ones place, so the calculated result should also have its last significant figure in the ones place. | |||
The rule to calculate significant figures for multiplication and division are not the same as the rule for addition and subtraction. For multiplication and division, only the total number of significant figures in each of the factors in the calculation matters; the digit position of the last significant figure in each factor is irrelevant. For addition and subtraction, only the digit position of the last significant figure in each of the terms in the calculation matters; the total number of significant figures in each term is irrelevant.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} However, greater accuracy will often be obtained if some non-significant digits are maintained in intermediate results which are used in subsequent calculations.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} | |||
=== Logarithm and antilogarithm === | |||
The ]-10 ] of a ] (i.e., ''a'' × 10<sup>''b''</sup> with 1 ≤ ''a'' < 10 and ''b'' as an integer), is rounded such that its decimal part (called ]) has as many significant figures as the significant figures in the normalized number. | |||
* log<sub>10</sub>(3.000 × 10<sup>4</sup>) = log<sub>10</sub>(10<sup>4</sup>) + log<sub>10</sub>(3.000) = 4.000000... (exact number so infinite significant digits) + 0.477{{overline|1}}212547... = 4.477{{overline|1}}212547 ≈ 4.4771. | |||
When taking the antilogarithm of a normalized number, the result is rounded to have as many significant figures as the significant figures in the decimal part of the number to be antiloged. | |||
* 10<sup>4.4771</sup> = 299{{overline|9}}8.5318119... = 30000 = 3.000 × 10<sup>4</sup>. | |||
=== Transcendental functions === | |||
If a ] <math>f(x)</math> (e.g., the ], the ], and the ]) is differentiable at its domain element 'x', then its number of significant figures (denoted as "significant figures of <math>f(x)</math>") is approximately related with the number of significant figures in ''x'' (denoted as "significant figures of ''x''") by the formula | |||
<math> {\rm(significant ~ figures ~ of ~ f(x))} \approx {\rm(significant ~ figures ~ of ~ x)} - \log_{10} \left ( \left\vert{\frac{df(x)}{dx} \frac{x}{f(x)}}\right\vert \right ) </math>, | |||
where <math> \left\vert{\frac{df(x)}{dx} \frac{x}{f(x)}}\right\vert </math> is the ]. | |||
=== Round only on the final calculation result === | |||
When performing multiple stage calculations, do not round intermediate stage calculation results; keep as many digits as is practical (at least one more digit than the rounding rule allows per stage) until the end of all the calculations to avoid cumulative rounding errors while tracking or recording the significant figures in each intermediate result. Then, round the final result, for example, to the fewest number of significant figures (for multiplication or division) or leftmost last significant digit position (for addition or subtraction) among the inputs in the final calculation.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~vsanni/ph3/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements.pdf |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130618184216/http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~vsanni/ph3/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements/SignificantFiguresAndMeasurements.pdf |archive-date= June 18, 2013 |title= Measurements and Significant Figures (Draft) |first= Virgínio |last= de Oliveira Sannibale |year= 2001 |work= Freshman Physics Laboratory |publisher= California Institute of Technology, Physics Mathematics And Astronomy Division }}</ref> | |||
* (2.3494 + 1.345) × 1.2 = 3.69{{overline|4}}4 × 1.2 = 4.{{overline|4}}3328 ≈ 4.4. | |||
* (2.3494 × 1.345) + 1.2 = 3.15{{overline|9}}943 + 1.2 = 4.{{overline|3}}59943 ≈ 4.4. | |||
== Estimating an extra digit == | |||
When using a ruler, initially use the smallest mark as the first estimated digit. For example, if a ruler's smallest mark is 0.1 cm, and 4.5 cm is read, then it is 4.5 (±0.1 cm) or 4.4 cm to 4.6 cm as to the smallest mark interval. However, in practice a measurement can usually be estimated by eye to closer than the interval between the ruler's smallest mark, e.g. in the above case it might be estimated as between 4.51 cm and 4.53 cm.<ref name="UMmeasurements">{{cite web | |||
|title=Measurements | |||
|url=http://slc.umd.umich.edu/slconline/SIGF/page7.html | |||
|url-status=dead | |||
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170709090746/https://slc.umd.umich.edu/slconline/SIGF/page7.html | |||
|archive-date=2017-07-09 | |||
|website=slc.umd.umich.edu | |||
|publisher=University of Michigan | |||
|access-date=2017-07-03 | |||
|df=dmy | |||
|quote=As a general rule you should attempt to read any scale to one tenth of its smallest division by visual interpolation.}}</ref> | |||
It is also possible that the overall length of a ruler may not be accurate to the degree of the smallest mark, and the marks may be imperfectly spaced within each unit. However assuming a normal good quality ruler, it should be possible to estimate tenths between the nearest two marks to achieve an extra decimal place of accuracy.<ref name="Weston">{{cite book|title=Experimental Electrical Testing|url=https://archive.org/details/experimentalele00njgoog|quote=Experimental Electrical Testing..|date=1914|publisher=Weston Electrical Instruments Co.|location=Newark, NJ|page=|access-date=14 January 2019}}</ref> Failing to do this adds the error in reading the ruler to any error in the calibration of the ruler. | |||
== Estimation in statistic == | |||
{{Main|Estimation}} | {{Main|Estimation}} | ||
When estimating the proportion of individuals carrying some particular characteristic in a population, from a random sample of that population, the number of significant figures should not exceed the maximum precision allowed by that sample size |
When estimating the proportion of individuals carrying some particular characteristic in a population, from a random sample of that population, the number of significant figures should not exceed the maximum precision allowed by that sample size. | ||
== Relationship to accuracy and precision in measurement == | |||
For example, in a poll of 120 randomly chosen viewers of a regularly visited web page we find that 10 people disagree with a proposition on that web page. The order of magnitude of our sample size is Log<sub>10</sub>(120) = 2.0791812460..., which rounds to 2. Our estimated proportion of people who disagree with the proposition is therefore 0.083, or 8.3%, with 2 significant figures. This is because in different samples of 120 people from this population, our estimate would vary in units of 1/120, and any additional figures would misrepresent the size of our sample by giving spurious precision. To interpret our estimate of the number of viewers who disagree with the proposition we should then calculate some measure of our ] in this estimate. | |||
{{Main|Accuracy and precision}} | |||
Traditionally, in various technical fields, "accuracy" refers to the closeness of a given measurement to its true value; "precision" refers to the stability of that measurement when repeated many times. Thus, it is possible to be "precisely wrong". Hoping to reflect the way in which the term "accuracy" is actually used in the scientific community, there is a recent standard, ISO 5725, which keeps the same definition of precision but defines the term "trueness" as the closeness of a given measurement to its true value and uses the term "accuracy" as the combination of trueness and precision. (See the ] article for a full discussion.) In either case, the number of significant figures roughly corresponds to ''precision'', not to accuracy or the newer concept of trueness. <!-- The smaller digits are not significant because they effectively random noise generated by the measurement process having little to do with the true value; they, they can be omitted for some reporting purposes. (This approach ignores techniques such as averaging to produce a higher-precision result.) *****NOTE: Aside from being broken grammatically, the previous blanket statement is unlikely to be true—it depends on the precision of the instruments and the exact situation. --> | |||
== In computing == | |||
==Relationship to accuracy and precision in measurement== | |||
{{Main|Floating-point arithmetic}} | |||
{{main|Accuracy and precision}} | |||
Computer representations of floating-point numbers use a form of rounding to significant figures (while usually not keeping track of how many), in general with ]s. The number of correct significant figures is closely related to the notion of ] (which has the advantage of being a more accurate measure of precision, and is independent of the ], also known as the base, of the number system used). | |||
{{anchor|Sig-fig calculator}}]s supporting a dedicated significant figures display mode are relatively rare. | |||
Traditionally, in various technical fields, "accuracy" refers to the closeness of a given measurement to its true value; "precision" refers to the stability of that measurement when repeated many times. Hoping to reflect the way the term "accuracy" is actually used in the scientific community, there is a more recent standard, ISO 5725, which keeps the same definition of precision but defines the term "trueness" as the closeness of a given measurement to its true value and uses the term "accuracy" as the combination of trueness and precision. (See the ] article for a fuller discussion.) In either case, the number of significant figures roughly corresponds to ''precision'', not to either use of the word accuracy or to the newer concept of trueness. <!--The smaller digits are not significant because they effectively random noise generated by the measurement process having little to do with the true value; they, they can be omitted for some reporting purposes. (This approach ignores techniques such as averaging to produce a higher-precision result.) *****NOTE: Aside from being broken grammatically, the previous blanket statement is unlikely to be true—it depends on the precision of the instruments and the exact situation. --> | |||
Among the calculators to support related features are the ] ] (1976)<ref name="Commodore_M55"/> and the ] (1976),<ref name="Commodore_S61"/> which support two display modes, where {{key|DISP|''n''}} will give ''n'' significant digits in total, while {{key|DISP|.|''n''}} will give ''n'' decimal places. | |||
==In computing== | |||
{{main|Floating point}} | |||
Computer representations of ] typically use a form of rounding to significant figures, but with ]s. The number of correct significant figures is closely related to the notion of ] (which has the advantage of being a more accurate measure of precision, and is independent of the radix of the number system used). | |||
The ] ] (1999) and ] (2004) families of ]s support a ''Sig-Fig Calculator'' mode in which the calculator will evaluate the count of significant digits of entered numbers and display it in square brackets behind the corresponding number. The results of calculations will be adjusted to only show the significant digits as well.<ref name="TI_2023"/> | |||
==See also== | |||
*] | |||
*] (First Digit Law) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (IEEE floating point standard) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
For the ] ]/]-based community-developed ] (2011) and ] (2014) calculators significant figures display modes {{key|SIG|''n''}} and {{key|SIG0|''n''}} (with zero padding) are available as a ] option.<ref name="Bit_2014"/><ref name="Bit_2015"/> The ] ]-based community-developed calculators ] (2019)<ref name="Mostert_2020"/> / ] (2022) / ] (2023) support a significant figures display mode as well. | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== See also == | |||
{{Div col|small=yes}} | |||
* ] (first-digit law) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] (IEEE floating-point standard) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{Div col end}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist|refs= | |||
<ref name="TI_2023">{{cite web |title=Solution 30190: Using The Significant Numbers Calculator From The Science Tools App on the TI-83 Plus and TI-84 Plus Family of Graphing Calculators. |publisher=] |work=Knowledge Base |date=2023 |url=https://education.ti.com/en/customer-support/knowledge-base/ti-83-84-plus-family/product-usage/30190 |access-date=2023-09-30 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230916052157/https://education.ti.com/en/customer-support/knowledge-base/ti-83-84-plus-family/product-usage/30190 |archive-date=2023-09-16}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bit_2014">{{cite web |title=Bit's WP 34S and 31S patches and custom binaries (version: r3802 20150805-1) |author=Bit |date=2014-11-15 |work=MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators |url=https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-2433.html |access-date=2023-09-24 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230924153615/https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-2433.html |archive-date=2023-09-24}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bit_2015">{{cite web |title= Unique display mode: significant figures |author=Bit |date=2015-02-07 |work=MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators |url=https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-3029.html |access-date=2023-09-24 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230924153537/https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-3029.html |archive-date=2023-09-24}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Commodore_M55">{{cite book |title=commodore m55 Mathematician Owners Manual |publisher=] / Mitchells Printers (Luton) Limited |publication-place=Palo Alto, California, USA / Luton, UK |date= |id=201318-01 |url=https://www.wass.net/manuals/Commodore%20M55.pdf |access-date=2023-09-30 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230930153945/https://www.wass.net/manuals/Commodore%20M55.pdf |archive-date=2023-09-30}} (1+151+1 pages)</ref> | |||
<ref name="Commodore_S61">{{cite book |title=commodore s61 Statistician Owners Handbook |publisher=] |publication-place=Palo Alto, California, USA |date= |url=https://usermanual.wiki/Manual/CommodoreS61.1456454574/view |access-date=2023-09-30 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230930154709/https://usermanual.wiki/Manual/CommodoreS61.1456454574/view |archive-date=2023-09-30}} (2+114 pages)</ref> | |||
<ref name="Mostert_2020">{{cite web |title=Changes from the WP43S to the WP43C |author-first=Jaco "Jaymos" |author-last=Mostert |version=v047 |date=2020-02-11 |url=https://cocoon-creations.com/download/WP43C_differences_v047.pdf |access-date=2023-10-01 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231001103735/https://cocoon-creations.com/download/WP43C_differences_v047.pdf |archive-date=2023-10-01}} (30 pages)</ref> | |||
}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
*{{cite journal |first1=D. B. |last1=Delury |year=1958 |title=Computations with approximate numbers |journal=The Mathematics Teacher |volume=51 |issue=7 |pages=521–30 |doi=10.5951/MT.51.7.0521 |jstor=27955748}} | |||
*{{cite journal |first1=E. A. |last1=Bond |year=1931 |title=Significant Digits in Computation with Approximate Numbers |journal=The Mathematics Teacher |volume=24 |issue=4 |pages=208–12 |doi=10.5951/MT.24.4.0208 |jstor=27951340}} | |||
* ] E29-06b, Standard Practice for Using Significant Digits in Test Data to Determine Conformance with Specifications | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* | * | ||
* | |||
* and some explanations of the shortcomings of significance arithmetic and significant figures. | |||
* – Displays a number with the desired number of significant digits. | |||
* – Proper methods for expressing uncertainty, including a detailed discussion of the problems with any notion of significant digits. | |||
] | ] |
Latest revision as of 14:41, 19 December 2024
Any digit of a number within its measurement resolution, as opposed to spurious digits Not to be confused with Significant Figures (book). "First digit" redirects here. For the body part, see First digit (anatomy).This article needs additional citations for verification. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Significant figures" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Fit approximation |
---|
Concepts |
Other fundamentals |
Significant figures, also referred to as significant digits or sig figs, are specific digits within a number written in positional notation that carry both reliability and necessity in conveying a particular quantity. When presenting the outcome of a measurement (such as length, pressure, volume, or mass), if the number of digits exceeds what the measurement instrument can resolve, only the number of digits within the resolution's capability are dependable and therefore considered significant.
For instance, if a length measurement yields 114.8 mm, using a ruler with the smallest interval between marks at 1 mm, the first three digits (1, 1, and 4, representing 114 mm) are certain and constitute significant figures. Further, digits that are uncertain yet meaningful are also included in the significant figures. In this example, the last digit (8, contributing 0.8 mm) is likewise considered significant despite its uncertainty. Therefore, this measurement contains four significant figures.
Another example involves a volume measurement of 2.98 L with an uncertainty of ± 0.05 L. The actual volume falls between 2.93 L and 3.03 L. Even if certain digits are not completely known, they are still significant if they are meaningful, as they indicate the actual volume within an acceptable range of uncertainty. In this case, the actual volume might be 2.94 L or possibly 3.02 L, so all three digits are considered significant. Thus, there are three significant figures in this example.
The following types of digits are not considered significant:
- Leading zeros. For instance, 013 kg has two significant figures—1 and 3—while the leading zero is insignificant since it does not impact the mass indication; 013 kg is equivalent to 13 kg, rendering the zero unnecessary. Similarly, in the case of 0.056 m, there are two insignificant leading zeros since 0.056 m is the same as 56 mm, thus the leading zeros do not contribute to the length indication.
- Trailing zeros when they serve as placeholders. In the measurement 1500 m, when the measurement resolution is 100 m, the trailing zeros are insignificant as they simply stand for the tens and ones places. In this instance, 1500 m indicates the length is approximately 1500 m rather than an exact value of 1500 m.
- Spurious digits that arise from calculations resulting in a higher precision than the original data or a measurement reported with greater precision than the instrument's resolution.
A zero after a decimal (e.g., 1.0) is significant, and care should be used when appending such a decimal of zero. Thus, in the case of 1.0, there are two significant figures, whereas 1 (without a decimal) has one significant figure.
Among a number's significant digits, the most significant digit is the one with the greatest exponent value (the leftmost significant digit/figure), while the least significant digit is the one with the lowest exponent value (the rightmost significant digit/figure). For example, in the number "123" the "1" is the most significant digit, representing hundreds (10), while the "3" is the least significant digit, representing ones (10).
To avoid conveying a misleading level of precision, numbers are often rounded. For instance, it would create false precision to present a measurement as 12.34525 kg when the measuring instrument only provides accuracy to the nearest gram (0.001 kg). In this case, the significant figures are the first five digits (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) from the leftmost digit, and the number should be rounded to these significant figures, resulting in 12.345 kg as the accurate value. The rounding error (in this example, 0.00025 kg = 0.25 g) approximates the numerical resolution or precision. Numbers can also be rounded for simplicity, not necessarily to indicate measurement precision, such as for the sake of expediency in news broadcasts.
Significance arithmetic encompasses a set of approximate rules for preserving significance through calculations. More advanced scientific rules are known as the propagation of uncertainty.
Radix 10 (base-10, decimal numbers) is assumed in the following. (See unit in the last place for extending these concepts to other bases.)
Identifying significant figures
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Rules to identify significant figures in a number
Identifying the significant figures in a number requires knowing which digits are meaningful, which requires knowing the resolution with which the number is measured, obtained, or processed. For example, if the measurable smallest mass is 0.001 g, then in a measurement given as 0.00234 g the "4" is not useful and should be discarded, while the "3" is useful and should often be retained.
- Non-zero digits within the given measurement or reporting resolution are significant.
- 91 has two significant figures (9 and 1) if they are measurement-allowed digits.
- 123.45 has five significant digits (1, 2, 3, 4 and 5) if they are within the measurement resolution. If the resolution is, say, 0.1, then the 5 shows that the true value to 4 sig figs is equally likely to be 123.4 or 123.5.
- Zeros between two significant non-zero digits are significant (significant trapped zeros).
- 101.12003 consists of eight significant figures if the resolution is to 0.00001.
- 125.340006 has seven significant figures if the resolution is to 0.0001: 1, 2, 5, 3, 4, 0, and 0.
- Zeros to the left of the first non-zero digit (leading zeros) are not significant.
- If a length measurement gives 0.052 km, then 0.052 km = 52 m so 5 and 2 are only significant; the leading zeros appear or disappear, depending on which unit is used, so they are not necessary to indicate the measurement scale.
- 0.00034 has 2 significant figures (3 and 4) if the resolution is 0.00001.
- Zeros to the right of the last non-zero digit (trailing zeros) in a number with the decimal point are significant if they are within the measurement or reporting resolution.
- 1.200 has four significant figures (1, 2, 0, and 0) if they are allowed by the measurement resolution.
- 0.0980 has three significant digits (9, 8, and the last zero) if they are within the measurement resolution.
- 120.000 consists of six significant figures (1, 2, and the four subsequent zeroes) if, as before, they are within the measurement resolution.
- Trailing zeros in an integer may or may not be significant, depending on the measurement or reporting resolution.
- 45,600 has 3, 4 or 5 significant figures depending on how the last zeros are used. For example, if the length of a road is reported as 45600 m without information about the reporting or measurement resolution, then it is not clear if the road length is precisely measured as 45600 m or if it is a rough estimate. If it is the rough estimation, then only the first three non-zero digits are significant since the trailing zeros are neither reliable nor necessary; 45600 m can be expressed as 45.6 km or as 4.56 × 10 m in scientific notation, and neither expression requires the trailing zeros.
- An exact number has an infinite number of significant figures.
- If the number of apples in a bag is 4 (exact number), then this number is 4.0000... (with infinite trailing zeros to the right of the decimal point). As a result, 4 does not impact the number of significant figures or digits in the result of calculations with it.
- A mathematical or physical constant has significant figures to its known digits.
- π is a specific real number with several equivalent definitions. All of the digits in its exact decimal expansion 3.14159265358979323... are significant. Although many properties of these digits are known — for example, they do not repeat, because π is irrational — not all of the digits are known. As of March 2024, more than 102 trillion digits have been calculated. A 102 trillion-digit approximation has 102 trillion significant digits. In practical applications, far fewer digits are used. The everyday approximation 3.14 has three significant figures and 7 correct binary digits. The approximation 22/7 has the same three correct decimal digits but has 10 correct binary digits. Most calculators and computer programs can handle the 16-digit expansion 3.141592653589793, which is sufficient for interplanetary navigation calculations.
- The Planck constant is and is defined as an exact value so that it is more properly defined as .
Ways to denote significant figures in an integer with trailing zeros
The significance of trailing zeros in a number not containing a decimal point can be ambiguous. For example, it may not always be clear if the number 1300 is precise to the nearest unit (just happens coincidentally to be an exact multiple of a hundred) or if it is only shown to the nearest hundreds due to rounding or uncertainty. Many conventions exist to address this issue. However, these are not universally used and would only be effective if the reader is familiar with the convention:
- Less often, using a closely related convention, the last significant figure of a number may be underlined; for example, "1300" has two significant figures.
- A decimal point may be placed after the number; for example "1300." indicates specifically that trailing zeros are meant to be significant.
As the conventions above are not in general use, the following more widely recognized options are available for indicating the significance of number with trailing zeros:
- Eliminate ambiguous or non-significant zeros by changing the unit prefix in a number with a unit of measurement. For example, the precision of measurement specified as 1300 g is ambiguous, while if stated as 1.30 kg it is not. Likewise 0.0123 L can be rewritten as 12.3 mL.
- Eliminate ambiguous or non-significant zeros by using Scientific Notation: For example, 1300 with three significant figures becomes 1.30×10. Likewise 0.0123 can be rewritten as 1.23×10. The part of the representation that contains the significant figures (1.30 or 1.23) is known as the significand or mantissa. The digits in the base and exponent (10 or 10) are considered exact numbers so for these digits, significant figures are irrelevant.
- Explicitly state the number of significant figures (the abbreviation s.f. is sometimes used): For example "20 000 to 2 s.f." or "20 000 (2 sf)".
- State the expected variability (precision) explicitly with a plus–minus sign, as in 20 000 ± 1%. This also allows specifying a range of precision in-between powers of ten.
Rounding to significant figures
Rounding to significant figures is a more general-purpose technique than rounding to n digits, since it handles numbers of different scales in a uniform way. For example, the population of a city might only be known to the nearest thousand and be stated as 52,000, while the population of a country might only be known to the nearest million and be stated as 52,000,000. The former might be in error by hundreds, and the latter might be in error by hundreds of thousands, but both have two significant figures (5 and 2). This reflects the fact that the significance of the error is the same in both cases, relative to the size of the quantity being measured.
To round a number to n significant figures:
- If the n + 1 digit is greater than 5 or is 5 followed by other non-zero digits, add 1 to the n digit. For example, if we want to round 1.2459 to 3 significant figures, then this step results in 1.25.
- If the n + 1 digit is 5 not followed by other digits or followed by only zeros, then rounding requires a tie-breaking rule. For example, to round 1.25 to 2 significant figures:
- Round half away from zero rounds up to 1.3. This is the default rounding method implied in many disciplines if the required rounding method is not specified.
- Round half to even, which rounds to the nearest even number. With this method, 1.25 is rounded down to 1.2. If this method applies to 1.35, then it is rounded up to 1.4. This is the method preferred by many scientific disciplines, because, for example, it avoids skewing the average value of a long list of values upwards.
- For an integer in rounding, replace the digits after the n digit with zeros. For example, if 1254 is rounded to 2 significant figures, then 5 and 4 are replaced to 0 so that it will be 1300. For a number with the decimal point in rounding, remove the digits after the n digit. For example, if 14.895 is rounded to 3 significant figures, then the digits after 8 are removed so that it will be 14.9.
In financial calculations, a number is often rounded to a given number of places. For example, to two places after the decimal separator for many world currencies. This is done because greater precision is immaterial, and usually it is not possible to settle a debt of less than the smallest currency unit.
In UK personal tax returns, income is rounded down to the nearest pound, whilst tax paid is calculated to the nearest penny.
As an illustration, the decimal quantity 12.345 can be expressed with various numbers of significant figures or decimal places. If insufficient precision is available then the number is rounded in some manner to fit the available precision. The following table shows the results for various total precision at two rounding ways (N/A stands for Not Applicable).
Precision | Rounded to significant figures |
Rounded to decimal places |
---|---|---|
6 | 12.3450 | 12.345000 |
5 | 12.345 | 12.34500 |
4 | 12.34 or 12.35 | 12.3450 |
3 | 12.3 | 12.345 |
2 | 12 | 12.34 or 12.35 |
1 | 10 | 12.3 |
0 | — | 12 |
Another example for 0.012345. (Remember that the leading zeros are not significant.)
Precision | Rounded to significant figures |
Rounded to decimal places |
---|---|---|
7 | 0.01234500 | 0.0123450 |
6 | 0.0123450 | 0.012345 |
5 | 0.012345 | 0.01234 or 0.01235 |
4 | 0.01234 or 0.01235 | 0.0123 |
3 | 0.0123 | 0.012 |
2 | 0.012 | 0.01 |
1 | 0.01 | 0.0 |
0 | — | 0 |
The representation of a non-zero number x to a precision of p significant digits has a numerical value that is given by the formula:
- where
which may need to be written with a specific marking as detailed above to specify the number of significant trailing zeros.
Writing uncertainty and implied uncertainty
Significant figures in writing uncertainty
It is recommended for a measurement result to include the measurement uncertainty such as , where xbest and σx are the best estimate and uncertainty in the measurement respectively. xbest can be the average of measured values and σx can be the standard deviation or a multiple of the measurement deviation. The rules to write are:
- σx should usually be quoted to only one or two significant figures, as more precision is unlikely to be reliable or meaningful:
- 1.79 ± 0.06 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.96 (correct), 1.79 ± 1.96 (incorrect).
- The digit positions of the last significant figures in xbest and σx are the same, otherwise the consistency is lost. For example, "1.79 ± 0.067" is incorrect, as it does not make sense to have more accurate uncertainty than the best estimate.
- 1.79 ± 0.06 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.96 (correct), 1.79 ± 0.067 (incorrect).
Implied uncertainty
Uncertainty may be implied by the last significant figure if it is not explicitly expressed. The implied uncertainty is ± the half of the minimum scale at the last significant figure position. For example, if the mass of an object is reported as 3.78 kg without mentioning uncertainty, then ± 0.005 kg measurement uncertainty may be implied. If the mass of an object is estimated as 3.78 ± 0.07 kg, so the actual mass is probably somewhere in the range 3.71 to 3.85 kg, and it is desired to report it with a single number, then 3.8 kg is the best number to report since its implied uncertainty ± 0.05 kg gives a mass range of 3.75 to 3.85 kg, which is close to the measurement range. If the uncertainty is a bit larger, i.e. 3.78 ± 0.09 kg, then 3.8 kg is still the best single number to quote, since if "4 kg" was reported then a lot of information would be lost.
If there is a need to write the implied uncertainty of a number, then it can be written as with stating it as the implied uncertainty (to prevent readers from recognizing it as the measurement uncertainty), where x and σx are the number with an extra zero digit (to follow the rules to write uncertainty above) and the implied uncertainty of it respectively. For example, 6 kg with the implied uncertainty ± 0.5 kg can be stated as 6.0 ± 0.5 kg.
Arithmetic
As there are rules to determine the significant figures in directly measured quantities, there are also guidelines (not rules) to determine the significant figures in quantities calculated from these measured quantities.
Significant figures in measured quantities are most important in the determination of significant figures in calculated quantities with them. A mathematical or physical constant (e.g., π in the formula for the area of a circle with radius r as πr) has no effect on the determination of the significant figures in the result of a calculation with it if its known digits are equal to or more than the significant figures in the measured quantities used in the calculation. An exact number such as ½ in the formula for the kinetic energy of a mass m with velocity v as ½mv has no bearing on the significant figures in the calculated kinetic energy since its number of significant figures is infinite (0.500000...).
The guidelines described below are intended to avoid a calculation result more precise than the measured quantities, but it does not ensure the resulted implied uncertainty close enough to the measured uncertainties. This problem can be seen in unit conversion. If the guidelines give the implied uncertainty too far from the measured ones, then it may be needed to decide significant digits that give comparable uncertainty.
Multiplication and division
For quantities created from measured quantities via multiplication and division, the calculated result should have as many significant figures as the least number of significant figures among the measured quantities used in the calculation. For example,
- 1.234 × 2 = 2.468 ≈ 2
- 1.234 × 2.0 = 2.468 ≈ 2.5
- 0.01234 × 2 = 0.02468 ≈ 0.02
- 0.012345678 / 0.00234 = 5.2759 ≈ 5.28
with one, two, and one significant figures respectively. (2 here is assumed not an exact number.) For the first example, the first multiplication factor has four significant figures and the second has one significant figure. The factor with the fewest or least significant figures is the second one with only one, so the final calculated result should also have one significant figure.
Exception
For unit conversion, the implied uncertainty of the result can be unsatisfactorily higher than that in the previous unit if this rounding guideline is followed; For example, 8 inch has the implied uncertainty of ± 0.5 inch = ± 1.27 cm. If it is converted to the centimeter scale and the rounding guideline for multiplication and division is followed, then 20.32 cm ≈ 20 cm with the implied uncertainty of ± 5 cm. If this implied uncertainty is considered as too overestimated, then more proper significant digits in the unit conversion result may be 20.32 cm ≈ 20. cm with the implied uncertainty of ± 0.5 cm.
Another exception of applying the above rounding guideline is to multiply a number by an integer, such as 1.234 × 9. If the above guideline is followed, then the result is rounded as 1.234 × 9.000.... = 11.106 ≈ 11.11. However, this multiplication is essentially adding 1.234 to itself 9 times such as 1.234 + 1.234 + … + 1.234 so the rounding guideline for addition and subtraction described below is more proper rounding approach. As a result, the final answer is 1.234 + 1.234 + … + 1.234 = 11.106 = 11.106 (one significant digit increase).
Addition and subtraction of significant figures
For quantities created from measured quantities via addition and subtraction, the last significant figure position (e.g., hundreds, tens, ones, tenths, hundredths, and so forth) in the calculated result should be the same as the leftmost or largest digit position among the last significant figures of the measured quantities in the calculation. For example,
- 1.234 + 2 = 3.234 ≈ 3
- 1.234 + 2.0 = 3.234 ≈ 3.2
- 0.01234 + 2 = 2.01234 ≈ 2
- 12000 + 77 = 12077 ≈ 12000
with the last significant figures in the ones place, tenths place, ones place, and thousands place respectively. (2 here is assumed not an exact number.) For the first example, the first term has its last significant figure in the thousandths place and the second term has its last significant figure in the ones place. The leftmost or largest digit position among the last significant figures of these terms is the ones place, so the calculated result should also have its last significant figure in the ones place.
The rule to calculate significant figures for multiplication and division are not the same as the rule for addition and subtraction. For multiplication and division, only the total number of significant figures in each of the factors in the calculation matters; the digit position of the last significant figure in each factor is irrelevant. For addition and subtraction, only the digit position of the last significant figure in each of the terms in the calculation matters; the total number of significant figures in each term is irrelevant. However, greater accuracy will often be obtained if some non-significant digits are maintained in intermediate results which are used in subsequent calculations.
Logarithm and antilogarithm
The base-10 logarithm of a normalized number (i.e., a × 10 with 1 ≤ a < 10 and b as an integer), is rounded such that its decimal part (called mantissa) has as many significant figures as the significant figures in the normalized number.
- log10(3.000 × 10) = log10(10) + log10(3.000) = 4.000000... (exact number so infinite significant digits) + 0.4771212547... = 4.4771212547 ≈ 4.4771.
When taking the antilogarithm of a normalized number, the result is rounded to have as many significant figures as the significant figures in the decimal part of the number to be antiloged.
- 10 = 29998.5318119... = 30000 = 3.000 × 10.
Transcendental functions
If a transcendental function (e.g., the exponential function, the logarithm, and the trigonometric functions) is differentiable at its domain element 'x', then its number of significant figures (denoted as "significant figures of ") is approximately related with the number of significant figures in x (denoted as "significant figures of x") by the formula
,
where is the condition number.
Round only on the final calculation result
When performing multiple stage calculations, do not round intermediate stage calculation results; keep as many digits as is practical (at least one more digit than the rounding rule allows per stage) until the end of all the calculations to avoid cumulative rounding errors while tracking or recording the significant figures in each intermediate result. Then, round the final result, for example, to the fewest number of significant figures (for multiplication or division) or leftmost last significant digit position (for addition or subtraction) among the inputs in the final calculation.
- (2.3494 + 1.345) × 1.2 = 3.6944 × 1.2 = 4.43328 ≈ 4.4.
- (2.3494 × 1.345) + 1.2 = 3.159943 + 1.2 = 4.359943 ≈ 4.4.
Estimating an extra digit
When using a ruler, initially use the smallest mark as the first estimated digit. For example, if a ruler's smallest mark is 0.1 cm, and 4.5 cm is read, then it is 4.5 (±0.1 cm) or 4.4 cm to 4.6 cm as to the smallest mark interval. However, in practice a measurement can usually be estimated by eye to closer than the interval between the ruler's smallest mark, e.g. in the above case it might be estimated as between 4.51 cm and 4.53 cm.
It is also possible that the overall length of a ruler may not be accurate to the degree of the smallest mark, and the marks may be imperfectly spaced within each unit. However assuming a normal good quality ruler, it should be possible to estimate tenths between the nearest two marks to achieve an extra decimal place of accuracy. Failing to do this adds the error in reading the ruler to any error in the calibration of the ruler.
Estimation in statistic
Main article: EstimationWhen estimating the proportion of individuals carrying some particular characteristic in a population, from a random sample of that population, the number of significant figures should not exceed the maximum precision allowed by that sample size.
Relationship to accuracy and precision in measurement
Main article: Accuracy and precisionTraditionally, in various technical fields, "accuracy" refers to the closeness of a given measurement to its true value; "precision" refers to the stability of that measurement when repeated many times. Thus, it is possible to be "precisely wrong". Hoping to reflect the way in which the term "accuracy" is actually used in the scientific community, there is a recent standard, ISO 5725, which keeps the same definition of precision but defines the term "trueness" as the closeness of a given measurement to its true value and uses the term "accuracy" as the combination of trueness and precision. (See the accuracy and precision article for a full discussion.) In either case, the number of significant figures roughly corresponds to precision, not to accuracy or the newer concept of trueness.
In computing
Main article: Floating-point arithmeticComputer representations of floating-point numbers use a form of rounding to significant figures (while usually not keeping track of how many), in general with binary numbers. The number of correct significant figures is closely related to the notion of relative error (which has the advantage of being a more accurate measure of precision, and is independent of the radix, also known as the base, of the number system used).
Electronic calculators supporting a dedicated significant figures display mode are relatively rare.
Among the calculators to support related features are the Commodore M55 Mathematician (1976) and the S61 Statistician (1976), which support two display modes, where DISP+n will give n significant digits in total, while DISP+.+n will give n decimal places.
The Texas Instruments TI-83 Plus (1999) and TI-84 Plus (2004) families of graphical calculators support a Sig-Fig Calculator mode in which the calculator will evaluate the count of significant digits of entered numbers and display it in square brackets behind the corresponding number. The results of calculations will be adjusted to only show the significant digits as well.
For the HP 20b/30b-based community-developed WP 34S (2011) and WP 31S (2014) calculators significant figures display modes SIG+n and SIG0+n (with zero padding) are available as a compile-time option. The SwissMicros DM42-based community-developed calculators WP 43C (2019) / C43 (2022) / C47 (2023) support a significant figures display mode as well.
See also
- Benford's law (first-digit law)
- Engineering notation
- Error bar
- False precision
- Guard digit
- IEEE 754 (IEEE floating-point standard)
- Interval arithmetic
- Kahan summation algorithm
- Precision (computer science)
- Round-off error
References
- ^ Lower, Stephen (2021-03-31). "Significant Figures and Rounding". Chemistry - LibreTexts.
- Chemistry in the Community; Kendall-Hunt:Dubuque, IA 1988
- Giving a precise definition for the number of correct significant digits is not a straightforward matter: see Higham, Nicholas (2002). Accuracy and Stability of Numerical Algorithms (PDF) (2nd ed.). SIAM. pp. 3–5.
- "y-cruncher validation file"
- "How Many Decimals of Pi Do We Really Need? - Edu News". NASA/JPL Edu. Retrieved 2021-10-25.
- "Resolutions of the 26th CGPM" (PDF). BIPM. 2018-11-16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-11-19. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
- Myers, R. Thomas; Oldham, Keith B.; Tocci, Salvatore (2000). Chemistry. Austin, Texas: Holt Rinehart Winston. p. 59. ISBN 0-03-052002-9.
- Engelbrecht, Nancy; et al. (1990). "Rounding Decimal Numbers to a Designated Precision" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education.
- Numerical Mathematics and Computing, by Cheney and Kincaid.
- Luna, Eduardo. "Uncertainties and Significant Figures" (PDF). DeAnza College.
- "Significant Figures". Purdue University - Department of Physics and Astronomy.
- "Significant Figure Rules". Penn State University.
- "Uncertainty in Measurement- Significant Figures". Chemistry - LibreTexts. 2017-06-16.
- de Oliveira Sannibale, Virgínio (2001). "Measurements and Significant Figures (Draft)" (PDF). Freshman Physics Laboratory. California Institute of Technology, Physics Mathematics And Astronomy Division. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-18.
- "Measurements". slc.umd.umich.edu. University of Michigan. Archived from the original on 2017-07-09. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
As a general rule you should attempt to read any scale to one tenth of its smallest division by visual interpolation.
- Experimental Electrical Testing. Newark, NJ: Weston Electrical Instruments Co. 1914. p. 9. Retrieved 2019-01-14.
Experimental Electrical Testing..
- commodore m55 Mathematician Owners Manual (PDF). Palo Alto, California, USA / Luton, UK: Commodore Business Machines Inc. / Mitchells Printers (Luton) Limited. 201318-01. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2023-09-30. Retrieved 2023-09-30. (1+151+1 pages)
- commodore s61 Statistician Owners Handbook. Palo Alto, California, USA: Commodore Business Machines Inc. Archived from the original on 2023-09-30. Retrieved 2023-09-30. (2+114 pages)
- "Solution 30190: Using The Significant Numbers Calculator From The Science Tools App on the TI-83 Plus and TI-84 Plus Family of Graphing Calculators". Knowledge Base. Texas Instruments. 2023. Archived from the original on 2023-09-16. Retrieved 2023-09-30.
- Bit (2014-11-15). "Bit's WP 34S and 31S patches and custom binaries (version: r3802 20150805-1)". MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators. Archived from the original on 2023-09-24. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
- Bit (2015-02-07). "[34S & 31S] Unique display mode: significant figures". MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators. Archived from the original on 2023-09-24. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
- Mostert, Jaco "Jaymos" (2020-02-11). "Changes from the WP43S to the WP43C" (PDF). v047. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2023-10-01. Retrieved 2023-10-01. (30 pages)
Further reading
- Delury, D. B. (1958). "Computations with approximate numbers". The Mathematics Teacher. 51 (7): 521–30. doi:10.5951/MT.51.7.0521. JSTOR 27955748.
- Bond, E. A. (1931). "Significant Digits in Computation with Approximate Numbers". The Mathematics Teacher. 24 (4): 208–12. doi:10.5951/MT.24.4.0208. JSTOR 27951340.
- ASTM E29-06b, Standard Practice for Using Significant Digits in Test Data to Determine Conformance with Specifications
External links
- Significant Figures Video by Khan academy
- The Decimal Arithmetic FAQ — Is the decimal arithmetic ‘significance’ arithmetic?
- Advanced methods for handling uncertainty and some explanations of the shortcomings of significance arithmetic and significant figures.
- Significant Figures Calculator – Displays a number with the desired number of significant digits.
- Measurements and Uncertainties versus Significant Digits or Significant Figures – Proper methods for expressing uncertainty, including a detailed discussion of the problems with any notion of significant digits.