A quantity which is calculated using quantities with known uncertainties will have an uncertainty based upon the uncertainty of the quantities used in the calculation.
To determine the uncertainty in a quantity which is a function of other quantities, you can consider the dependence of these quantities in terms of a tayler expansion
Consider a calculation of a Table's Area
[math]A= L \times W[/math]
The mean that the Area (A) is a function of the Length (L) and the Width (W) of the table.
[math]A = f(L,W)[/math]
The Taylor series expansion of a function f(x) about the point a is given as
[math]f(x) = f(a) + f^{\prime}(x)|_{x=a} \frac{x}{1!} + f^{\prime \prime}(x)|_{x=a} \frac{x^2}{2!} + ...[/math]
- [math]= \sum_{n=0}^{infty} f^{(n)}(x)|_{x=a} \frac{x^n}{n!}[/math]
For small values of x (x << 1) we can expand the function about 0 such that
[math]\sqrt{1+x} = \sqrt{1-0} | \frac{1}{2}(1+x)^{-1/2}|_{x=0} \frac{x^1}{1!}+ \frac{1}{2}\frac{-1}{2}(1+x)^{-3/2}|_{x=0} \frac{x^2}{2!}[/math]
- [math]=1 + \frac{x}{2} - \frac{x^2}{4}[/math]
The talylor expansion of a function with two variable is given by
[math]f(x_1, x_2)=f({x_o}_1, {x_o}_2)+(x_1-{x_o}_1) \frac{\partial f}{\partial x_1}\bigg |_{(x_1 = x_{01}, x_2 = x_{02})} +(x_2-{x_o}_2) \frac{\partial f}{\partial x_2}\bigg |_{(x_1 = x_{01}, x_2 = x_{02})}[/math]
or
[math]f(x_1, x_2)-f({x_o}_1, {x_o}_2)=(x_1-{x_o}_1) \frac{\partial f}{\partial x_1}\bigg |_{(x_1 = x_{01}, x_2 = x_{02})} +(x_2-{x_o}_2) \frac{\partial f}{\partial x_2}\bigg |_{(x_1 = x_{01}, x_2 = x_{02})}[/math]
The term
[math]f(x_1, x_2)-f({x_o}_1, {x_o}_2)[/math]
represents a small fluctuation of the function from its average.