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Units and Measurements NEET Notes: Complete Guide with Formulas & Solved Examples

Units and Measurements
for NEET Physics

Master SI units, dimensions, error analysis & significant figures — the language of physics, explained for NEET aspirants.

SI Units Dimensions Error Analysis Significant Figures Vernier Calipers
📌 What you'll learn: NEET-level problem solving • All essential formulas • Step-by-step numericals • Quick revision hacks

🔍 Detailed concept explanation

⚖️ 1. Physical quantities and SI units

Physics is based on measurements. Seven base quantities (length, mass, time, electric current, temperature, amount of substance, luminous intensity) with their SI units: metre (m), kilogram (kg), second (s), ampere (A), kelvin (K), mole (mol), candela (cd). All other quantities are derived (e.g., speed = m/s).

📐 2. Dimensions and dimensional analysis

Dimensions express a physical quantity in terms of base quantities: e.g., velocity = [LT⁻¹]. Principle of homogeneity: only quantities with same dimensions can be added/subtracted/equated. Dimensional analysis helps convert units, derive formulas, and check equation consistency.

📏 3. Measurement errors

Systematic errors (instrumental, personal) and random errors. Absolute error Δa = |amean – a|, relative error = Δa/amean, percentage error = (Δa/amean)×100. For combination of errors: errors add in sum/difference, relative errors add in product/quotient, exponent multiples.

🔢 4. Significant figures

Rules: all non-zero digits are significant; zeros between non-zero digits are significant; trailing zeros after decimal are significant; leading zeros not significant. In multiplication/division, result has same SF as least precise number; in addition/subtraction, result limited by least precise decimal place.

📐 5. Measuring instruments: Vernier calipers & screw gauge

Least count = value of 1 MSD – value of 1 VSD (for vernier). For screw gauge, pitch / number of circular divisions. Zero error correction is crucial.

📋 Complete formula sheet

Dimensions of common quantities Force = [MLT⁻²]
Work = [ML²T⁻²]
Power = [ML²T⁻³]
Pressure = [ML⁻¹T⁻²]
Error combination Sum: ΔZ = Δa + Δb
Product: ΔZ/Z = Δa/a + Δb/b
Power: ΔZ/Z = |n|·Δa/a
Percentage error = (Δa/amean) × 100%
Least count Vernier: 1 MSD – 1 VSD
Screw gauge: pitch / circular divisions
QuantityDimension
Velocity, speed[LT⁻¹]
Acceleration[LT⁻²]
Force[MLT⁻²]
Energy, work, torque[ML²T⁻²]
Pressure, stress[ML⁻¹T⁻²]
Electric charge[AT]

✏️ Solved NEET-level examples

Example 1 (Dimensional analysis)

The time period T of a simple pendulum depends on length L and acceleration due to gravity g. Derive the formula using dimensions.

1 Assume T ∝ La gb. So T = k La gb.
2 Write dimensions: [T] = [L]a [LT⁻²]b = La+b T⁻²ᵇ.
3 Equate powers: for L: a + b = 0; for T: 1 = –2b ⇒ b = –½ ⇒ a = ½.
4 Thus T = k √(L/g). Experimentally k = 2π.

Example 2 (Error analysis)

The resistance R = V/I. If V = (10.0 ± 0.1) V and I = (2.0 ± 0.05) A, find R with error.

1 R = V/I = 10/2 = 5.0 Ω.
2 Relative error: ΔV/V = 0.1/10 = 0.01; ΔI/I = 0.05/2 = 0.025.
3 For division, ΔR/R = ΔV/V + ΔI/I = 0.01 + 0.025 = 0.035.
4 ΔR = 0.035 × 5 = 0.175 Ω ≈ 0.18 Ω. So R = (5.0 ± 0.18) Ω.

Example 3 (Significant figures)

Calculate 123.45 × 2.1 and express with correct significant figures.

1 123.45 has 5 SF, 2.1 has 2 SF (least).
2 Multiplication: 123.45 × 2.1 = 259.245.
3 Round to 2 SF → 260 (or 2.6×10²).

📈 Important graphs & key points

  • log–log plot : slope gives exponent in power law
  • Vernier caliper : main scale + vernier coincidence
  • Screw gauge : pitch and circular scale reading
  • Systematic vs random : systematic can be removed, random minimized by averaging

⭐ Dimensional analysis cannot determine dimensionless constants (like 2π).

⚡ Quick revision box

7 base units – m, kg, s, A, K, mol, cd
Dimensional formula – always write [MaLbTc…]
Error in product – add relative errors
Significant figures – final answer should match least precise input

⚠️ Common mistakes to avoid

  • Writing dimensions without square brackets: e.g., write [M L T⁻²] not M L T⁻²
  • Forgetting that angles and trigonometric functions are dimensionless
  • Incorrectly applying error combination rules (using absolute error where relative is needed)
  • Counting zeros in significant figures wrongly (e.g., 0.0056 has 2 SF, not 4)
  • Not considering zero error in vernier/screw gauge readings

🧠 Exam strategy tips

  • Memorize dimensional formulas of common physical quantities (force, energy, pressure).
  • In error questions, first identify whether to use absolute or relative error.
  • For significant figures, do the full calculation then round at the end.
  • Practice one numerical on vernier caliper reading – often asked.
  • Use dimensional analysis to eliminate wrong options quickly.

❓ Frequently asked questions

📌 What is the difference between fundamental and derived units?
Fundamental units are independent (e.g., meter, kilogram). Derived units are combinations of fundamental units (e.g., m/s, newton).
📌 Can dimensional analysis prove a formula is correct?
No, it can only check consistency; it cannot verify dimensionless constants or confirm the formula uniquely.
📌 How to find the least count of a vernier caliper?
Least count = 1 main scale division – 1 vernier scale division = value of 1 MSD / total vernier divisions.
📌 What is the rule for rounding off in significant figures?
If digit after rounding point is ≥5, increase last retained digit by 1; else leave it. For example, 2.346 to 3 SF → 2.35.

⚡ Master Units and Measurements – the foundation of all physics. Bookmark this page for last‑minute revision.

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