Units and Rates
1.1 Units and Rates
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Careful tracking of units and rates is essential for solving real-world problems, because numbers always come with units attached and rates precisely describe how quantities change over time.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Units must be consistent: when applying formulas, all quantities must use the same unit system (e.g., all distances in feet or all in miles).
- Unit conversion is algebraic: units behave like numbers—multiply by conversion factors and cancel matching units in numerator and denominator.
- Rate definition: rate equals change in quantity divided by change in time; the Greek letter Δ (delta) is shorthand for "change in."
- Common confusion: Δ quantity is always (final value minus initial value), not just "any difference"—order matters.
- Density as a ratio: density equals mass divided by volume; given any two of density/mass/volume, you can solve for the third.
📏 Working with units
📏 Why units matter
- Numbers in real problems don't occur in isolation; each number comes with a unit attached (feet, seconds, grams, etc.).
- The excerpt emphasizes: you must be VERY CAREFUL to use consistent units throughout a problem.
- Example: A marathon runner's speed is given in feet/second, but the race distance is in miles—you must convert one to match the other before applying formulas.
🔄 Unit conversion mechanics
Unit conversion: multiply by a conversion factor (a ratio equal to 1) and cancel matching units algebraically.
- Treat units like algebraic symbols: cancel common units in numerator and denominator.
- Example from the excerpt:
- 26.2 miles × (5,280 feet per mile) = (26.2)(5,280) feet
- The "mile" units cancel, leaving feet.
- You can chain conversions: seconds → minutes → hours by multiplying successive conversion factors.
🧮 Applying formulas with units
The excerpt uses the distance-speed-time relationship:
(total distance traveled) = (constant speed) × (elapsed time)
Written with units: (ft) = (ft/sec) × (sec)
- Plug in values with their units and verify that units on both sides match.
- Example: 138,336 ft = 18 ft/sec × t
Solve: t = 138,336 ft ÷ (18 ft/sec) = 7,685.33 sec - The division of units: ft ÷ (ft/sec) = ft × (sec/ft) = sec.
⚖️ Density as a unit ratio
Density = mass / volume
- Pure water has density 1 gram per cubic centimeter (1 g/cm³).
- Given any two of {density, mass, volume}, solve for the third.
- Example from the excerpt: 857 g of a substance with volume 2.1 liters
Density = (857 g) / (2.1 L) = 408 g/L
Convert liters to cm³: 1 L = 1,000 cm³, so density = 0.408 g/cm³.
🌐 Multi-step unit problems
The gold sphere example shows a chain of reasoning:
- Given: mass = 100 kg, density of gold = 19.3 g/cm³
- Convert mass: 100 kg × (1,000 g/kg) = 100,000 g
- Volume of sphere: V = (4/3) π r³
- Density equation: 19.3 g/cm³ = 100,000 g / V
- Solve for V, then for radius r.
- Don't confuse: the formula connects three quantities; you must isolate the unknown algebraically while keeping units consistent.
⏱️ Rates and change over time
⏱️ What a rate measures
Rate (or rate of change) = (change in the quantity) / (change in time)
- A rate describes how fast a quantity is changing, not the quantity itself.
- Common shorthand: Δ (delta) means "change in," so
rate = Δ quantity / Δ time
🔢 Calculating Δ (change)
The excerpt defines change precisely:
Δ quantity = (value at final time) − (value at initial time)
Δ time = (final time) − (initial time)
- Order matters: always subtract initial from final.
- Example: Temperature at 8:00 am is 65°F, at 10:00 am is 71°F.
- Δ temperature = 71 − 65 = 6 degrees
- Δ time = 10:00 − 8:00 = 2 hours
- Rate = 6 deg / 2 hr = 3 deg/hr (temperature is increasing).
🔄 Positive vs negative rates
- If the final value is greater than the initial value, Δ is positive → the quantity is increasing.
- If the final value is less than the initial value, Δ is negative → the quantity is decreasing.
- Example from the excerpt: On June 5, temperature at 8:00 am is 71° and at 10:00 am is 65°.
- Δ temperature = 65 − 71 = −6 degrees
- Rate = −6 deg / 2 hr = −3 deg/hr (temperature is decreasing).
- Don't confuse: a negative rate means the quantity is going down, not that you made a calculation error.
📐 Rate formula structure
| Component | Meaning | Units example |
|---|---|---|
| Δ quantity | Final value minus initial value | degrees Fahrenheit |
| Δ time | Final time minus initial time | hours |
| Rate | Δ quantity / Δ time | degrees per hour |
- The units of the rate are always "quantity units per time unit."
- Example: speed in feet per second, temperature change in degrees per hour, cost increase in dollars per year.