- . . . password.1
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Note that this ID/password combination is completely independent of
any others you may already have memorized!
Sorry about that, but ITservices still hasn't provided
the third party CWL authentication they promised years ago.
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- . . . site2
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You must use your CWL (Campus-Wide Login) username/password
to log in to any WebCT course.
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- . . . output3
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Note that we are focusing only on "useful work"
(raising your mass against gravity); the work done
by individual muscles moving body parts back and forth
in walking along a level path is ignored here
(i.e. it is included in
but not in ).
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- . . . member4
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Please do not attempt this exercise yourself if you are not sure
you can perform the climb without excessive exertion or health risk.
Each group should, however, have at least two climbing members.
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- . . . measurement.5
- This
is often referred to as an "error estimate" but there is no
negative connotation in estimating your uncertainty;
it is not an "error" but merely an honest observation.
Reporting measurements without any uncertainty
is, by contrast, fundamentally dishonest!
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- . . . ,6
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You probably know your "bare" weight
from the Doctor's office,
but did you have a heavy wallet in your pocket then?
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- . . . \/.7
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The general relation for a function
is
applied to a simple division, this gives
For the example shown, this will give us an uncertainty
W .
Since this is just an estimate, for simple calculations
you can get by with the method described in the question;
for more complicated functions of many variables,
that method will tend to overestimate the uncertainty,
because not every "nudge" will be in the same direction.
(This is why we add uncertainties "in quadrature".)
If you want to understand "error propagation" at a more
sophisticated level, ask any of us to explain it.
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- . . . stairs.8
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See the caveat for the first question.
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- . . . muscles.9
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A good automobile engine generates about 1 kW/kg.
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- . . . absortiometry.10
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Chilibeck et al., Eur. J. Appl. Physiol. (1998).
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- . . . 2000]11
- R. Conniff,
"So sweet, so mean" Smithonian, Sept. 2000, pp. 72-82.
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- . . . and]12
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The wording of this question caused unnecessary confusion.
We should have said either just "sugar content"
or just "honey content". You get full credit for
assuming either one (or any combination of the two,
since the difference is slight). For this solution
we will assume nectar is just honey diluted with water.
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- . . . 98 W/kg.13
- Chai & Dudley, Nature (1995).
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