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Physics Study Guide | SI Units

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Does it make sense?

Sometimes you will work with unfamiliar units, as in Example Problem 1, and you will need to use estimation to check that your answer makes sense mathematically. At other times you can check that an answer matches your experience, as shown in Figure 1-2. When you work with falling objects, for example, check that the time you calculate an object will take to fall matches your experience—a copper ball dropping 5 m in 0.002 s, or in 17 s, doesn’t make sense. 
 

Figure 1-2 What is a reasonable range of values for the speed of an automobile?

SI Units

To communicate results, it is helpful to use units that everyone understands. The worldwide scientific community and most countries currently use an adaptation of the metric system to state measurements. The Système International d’Unités, or SI, uses seven base quantities, which are shown in Table 1-1. These base quantities were originally defined in terms of direct measurements. Other units, called derived units, are created by combining the base units in various ways. For example, energy is measured in joules, where 1 joule equals one kilogram-meter squared per second squared, or 1 J = 1 kg.m2/s2. Electric charge is measured in coulombs, where 1 C = 1 A.s
 

Table 1-1
SI Base Units
Base Quantity Base Unit Symbol
Length meter m
Mass kilogram kg
Time second s
Temperature kelvin K
Amount of a substance mole mol
Electric current ampere A
Luminous intensity candela cd


Scientific institutions have been created to define and regulate measures. The SI system is regulated by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Sèvres, France. This bureau and the National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST) in Gaithersburg, Maryland keep the standards of length, time, and mass against which our metersticks, clocks, and balances are calibrated. Examples of two standards are shown in Figure 1-3. NIST works on many problems of measurement, including industrial and research applications.
 

Figure 1-3 The standards for the kilogram and meter are shown. The International Prototype Meter originally was measured as the distance between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar, but as methods of measuring time became more precise than those for measuring length, the meter came to be defined as the distance traveled by light in a vacuum in 1/299 792 458 s.


You probably learned in math class that it is much easier to convert meters to kilometers than feet to miles. The ease of switching between units is another feature of the metric system. To convert between SI units, multiply or divide by the appropriate power of 10. Prefixes are used to change SI units by powers of 10, as shown in Table 1-2. You often will encounter these prefixes in daily life, as in, for example, milligrams, nanoseconds, and gigabytes.

 

Table 1-2
Prefixes Used with SI Units
Prefix Symbol Multiplier Scientific Notation Example
femto- f 0.000000000000001 10−15 femtosecond (fs)
pico- p 0.000000000001 10−12 picometer (pm)
nano- n 0.000000001 10−9 nanometer (nm)
micro- µ 0.000001 10−6 microgram (µg)
milli- m 0.001 10−3 milliamps (mA)
centi- c 0.01 10−2 centimeter (cm)
deci- d 0.1 10−1 deciliter (dL)
kilo- k 1,000 103 kilogram (kg)
mega- M 1,000,000 106 Megagram (Mg)
giga- G 1,000,000,000 109 gigameter (Gm)
tera- T 1,000,000,000,000 1012 terahertz (THz)

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