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NCERT Physics Class 11 - Chapter 2: Units and Measurements - Notes

CBSEClass 11Physicsमात्रक और मापन

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the SI system of units and base quantities
  • Learn about dimensional analysis and its applications
  • Understand significant figures, errors, and accuracy in measurements
  • Apply dimensional analysis to check equations and derive relations
  • Learn about different types of errors in measurement

Key Concepts

SI Units and Base Quantities

The International System of Units (SI) defines seven base quantities and their units:

  • Length: metre (m)
  • Mass: kilogram (kg)
  • Time: second (s)
  • Electric Current: ampere (A)
  • Temperature: kelvin (K)
  • Amount of Substance: mole (mol)
  • Luminous Intensity: candela (cd)

Supplementary units: radian (rad) for plane angle, steradian (sr) for solid angle.

Dimensional Analysis

Every physical quantity can be expressed in terms of fundamental dimensions: [M], [L], [T], [A], [K], [mol], [cd].

Examples of dimensional formulas:

  • Force: [M L T⁻²]
  • Energy/Work: [M L² T⁻²]
  • Power: [M L² T⁻³]
  • Pressure: [M L⁻¹ T⁻²]
  • Gravitational constant G: [M⁻¹ L³ T⁻²]
  • Planck's constant h: [M L² T⁻¹]

Principle of Homogeneity: In a correct equation, the dimensions of each term on both sides must be the same. This is used to check the correctness of equations.

Significant Figures

Rules for counting significant figures:

  • All non-zero digits are significant: 1234 has 4 significant figures
  • Zeros between non-zero digits are significant: 1002 has 4 significant figures
  • Leading zeros are not significant: 0.0025 has 2 significant figures
  • Trailing zeros in a decimal number are significant: 3.500 has 4 significant figures
  • Trailing zeros without decimal point are ambiguous: 1200 may have 2, 3, or 4

Errors in Measurement

Absolute Error: Δa = |a_measured - a_mean|

Mean Absolute Error: Δa_mean = (1/n) Σ|Δaᵢ|

Relative Error: δa = Δa_mean / a_mean

Percentage Error: (Δa_mean / a_mean) × 100%

Combination of Errors:

  • Sum/Difference (Z = A ± B): ΔZ = ΔA + ΔB (absolute errors add)
  • Product/Quotient (Z = AB or A/B): ΔZ/Z = ΔA/A + ΔB/B (relative errors add)
  • Power (Z = Aⁿ): ΔZ/Z = n(ΔA/A) (relative error multiplied by power)

Applications of Dimensional Analysis

1. Checking correctness of equations: Each term must have the same dimensions.

2. Deriving relationships: If a quantity depends on other quantities, dimensional analysis can determine the form of the relationship.

3. Converting units: n₁u₁ = n₂u₂, where dimensions help convert between systems.

Limitations: Cannot determine dimensionless constants, cannot distinguish between quantities with same dimensions (e.g., work and torque), and cannot handle logarithmic or trigonometric functions.

Summary

The SI system provides a consistent set of units for all physical measurements. Dimensional analysis is a powerful tool for verifying equations, deriving relationships, and converting units. Significant figures indicate the precision of a measurement. Errors are classified as systematic and random, and they combine according to specific rules for sums, products, and powers.

Important Terms

  • Physical Quantity: A quantity that can be measured and expressed numerically
  • Dimensional Formula: Expression showing how a derived quantity depends on base quantities
  • Significant Figures: The number of meaningful digits in a measured value
  • Systematic Error: Consistent, repeatable error from faulty instruments or technique
  • Random Error: Unpredictable fluctuations in measurements
  • Parallax Error: Error due to incorrect positioning of the observer's eye
  • Least Count: The smallest measurement a measuring instrument can make

Quick Revision

  • 7 base SI units: m, kg, s, A, K, mol, cd
  • Dimensional formula of force = [MLT⁻²], energy = [ML²T⁻²]
  • Principle of homogeneity: dimensions must match on both sides of an equation
  • For Z = AᵖBq/Cʳ: ΔZ/Z = pΔA/A + qΔB/B + rΔC/C
  • 1 AU = 1.496 × 10¹¹ m, 1 light year = 9.46 × 10¹⁵ m, 1 parsec = 3.08 × 10¹⁶ m
  • 1 angstrom = 10⁻¹⁰ m, 1 fermi = 10⁻¹⁵ m
NCERT Physics Class 11 - Chapter 2: Units and Measurements - Notes | EduMunch