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no only if it is precise it is accurate
precise means accurate
What determines how precise a measurement is
Precise or Exact.
Accurate, exact"accurate" and "exact"
Results can be precise but not accurate when they are consistently close to each other but still far from the true value. This can happen due to systematic errors in measurement or experimental setup that consistently affect the results in the same way each time. In this case, the precision is high because the results are reproducible, but the accuracy is low because they do not reflect the true value.
no only if it is precise it is accurate
These numbers are precise, as they are all close together. If any one of these are accurate, then this group of numbers can be considered precise and accurate.
Systematic errors produce results that are consistent but not accurate. This means the measurements are close to each other but not necessarily close to the true value. This can lead to misleading conclusions because the error is consistently present in the data.
precise means accurate
What determines how precise a measurement is
Precise.
Accurate or precise are one and the same to which the automotive speedometer would never be.
It means-exact, specific or more accurate. example: can you be more precise on your answer?
No. Accurate relates to how close the actual measurement the instrument measures. Precise relates to how much detail the instrument gives when measuring. They are independent to each other: An measurement can be precise and accurate (eg the value of π is 3.141592654) An measurement can be precise and inaccurate (eg the value of π is 1.733677432) An measurement can be less precise and accurate (eg the value of π is 3.14) An measurement can be less precise and inaccurate (eg the value of π is 1.73).
Yes, it is possible. Accuracy refers to how close an observation is to the true value, while precision refers to how close repeated measurements are to each other. An observation can be accurate if it is close to the true value, even if the measurements are not precise and vary widely.
yes...