this is one of the best things that u can invest in with ur time. to watch this masterpiece of a playlist rather than cat vids around yt i'm at my 3rd year computer engineering and fully upsets with physics and i found this to be the most treasures thing i found . thx to the creators keep up ! luv u guys from iraq
I have a question. I have two measurements h and r. h is 32 meters r is 0.000017 meters. I’m using the formula h/(h+r). What is the correct answer using the correct number of sig fig? The denominator would become 32.0 using one more sig fig. So the answer is 32/32.0 or 1.0 BUT if I rewrite the equation as 1/(1+r/h) then I get r/h = 0.000000531 1+ r/h = 1.000000531 since one is exact we have 10 sig fig. 1/1.000000531= 0.9999994690!!! Where is the error or are both correct?
this is one of the best things that u can invest in with ur time.
to watch this masterpiece of a playlist rather than cat vids around yt
i'm at my 3rd year computer engineering and fully upsets with physics and i found this to be the most treasures thing i found . thx to the creators keep up !
luv u guys from iraq
This video helps so much, thank you!
Thank you gpb education
Great teaching video
I have a question. I have two measurements h and r. h is 32 meters r is 0.000017 meters.
I’m using the formula h/(h+r). What is the correct answer using the correct number of sig fig? The denominator would become 32.0 using one more sig fig. So the answer is 32/32.0 or 1.0
BUT if I rewrite the equation as 1/(1+r/h) then I get r/h = 0.000000531
1+ r/h = 1.000000531 since one is exact we have 10 sig fig.
1/1.000000531= 0.9999994690!!!
Where is the error or are both correct?
It really helped me 😌😃😄🥰