Physics, asked by ayushca88040, 8 months ago

accuracy is expressed in

Answers

Answered by MysteryUnsolved
5

Accuracy refers to how closely the measured value of a quantity corresponds to its true value. Precision expresses the degree of reproducibility or agreement between repeated measurements. The more measurements you make and the better the precision, the smaller the error will be.

❤️❤️❤️

Answered by subhamrout2019
0

Answer:

pls mark as brainlist answers

Explanation:

In measurement of a set, accuracy is closeness of the measurements to a specific value, while precision is the closeness of the measurements to each other.

Accuracy has two definitions:

More commonly, it is a description of systematic errors, a measure of statistical bias; low accuracy causes a difference between a result and a "true" value. ISO calls this trueness.

Alternatively, ISO defines[1] accuracy as describing a combination of both types of observational error above (random and systematic), so high accuracy requires both high precision and high trueness.

Precision is a description of random errors, a measure of statistical variability.

In simpler terms, given a set of data points from repeated measurements of the same quantity, the set can be said to be accurate if their average is close to the true value of the quantity being measured, while the set can be said to be precise if the values are close to each other. In the first, more common definition of "accuracy" above, the two concepts are independent of each other, so a particular set of data can be said to be either accurate, or precise, or both, or neither.

Similar questions