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ARE GPS MEASUREMENTS
ACCURATE OR PRECISE?
Concepts Name ___________________
Materials
Background - Definitions for precise & accurateThroughout the last few sections you have learned that GPS is a precise positioning tool that has the ability to record position with millimeter accuracy. But what is precision and accuracy? How and why do they differ? And what determines if the data you are collecting is accurate or precise? Accuracy is a measure of how close the result of the experiment is to the true value. Therefore, it is a measure of the correctness of the result. Precision is a measure of how well the result has been determined, without reference to its agreement with the true value. It is a measure of the reproducibility of the result. Precision and accuracy are important to scientists because they help to determine if data is usable or not. With GPS, scientists look at position data from different sites to see if it is close to the predicted value (accurate) and if the data values are the same from day to day (precise.) What they have found is that the more time they spend taking data at one location the more accurate the position measurements become. After 1 hour, measurements may vary 10 mm, while after 1 day, they vary 3 mm and after 7 days, they only vary by 1mm. When the data isn't accurate or precise, scientists know that something is either wrong at the site or interfering with the satellite signals before they reach the antenna. Interference of the GPS signal can be caused by anything--
a car driving by, other radio signals in the area, and even the atmosphere
itself. Because there is no way to predict what is effecting the results
of an experiment, all data values must contain some uncertainty, or
error. Uncertainty
, or error, for a group of values is an estimate of the differences
in values from trial to trial. These errors are divided into two groups,
systematic and random, depending on their origin. Systematic
errors , errors in accuracy, make results differ from their
"true" value , but are reproducible. These usually are a result
of operator error. For example, a person could be reading a ruler that
is marked in millimeters, but recording values in centimeters. While
all of the values would have the same units, they would be different
from the true value which would be in millimeters. Random
errors , errors in precision, effect the reproducibility
of results from test to test. These are usually a result of errors that
occur in the instrument itself (a broken thermometer, rough edges inside
a slide) and the experiment surroundings ( the experiment is done
in water instead of air, the experiment table is moving during a test.)
Write the definitions:Accuracy -
Precision -
Procedure
Part I: |