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A2 Daily A Level Physics question

2026-05-14 OCR A Uncertainty propagation (no calculus) OCR-A Module 1: Development of practical skills — 1.2.1/1.2.2 (Processing, analysing and evaluating; uncertainties) OCR-A Module 2: Foundations of physics — 2.1.1 (Physical quantities and units; percentage uncertainty)

In a required practical to determine g using a simple pendulum, a student measures the length L with a 2% uncertainty and the period T with a 1% uncertainty (from timing many swings). Using that g is proportional to L/T^2, what is the percentage uncertainty in g?

  1. A Approximately 3%
  2. B Approximately 2%
  3. C Approximately 4% (correct)
  4. D Approximately 5%

Answer

The correct answer is C.

Correct: C — Approximately 4%. Because g ∝ L/T^2, fractional uncertainties add with powers: Δg/g ≈ ΔL/L + 2(ΔT/T) = 2% + 2×1% = 4%. A adds 2% and 1% but ignores the squared dependence on T. B assumes only the length uncertainty contributes, which is wrong because T appears in the denominator squared. C follows the correct propagation rule for a product and a squared term. D overestimates by effectively double-counting or incorrectly squaring both uncertainties.