269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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CONDENSED GUIDE TO SI UNITS AND STANDARDS
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By Drew Daniels
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The following is a highly condensed guide to SI units, standard usage and
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numerical notation for the benefit of people who have occasion to write
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specifications or technical literature of any kind.
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The abominable disregard for (literary and verbal) communication
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standards even among engineers and highly skilled technicians makes for
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needless confusion, ambiguity and duplication of effort.
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Let's review the world standard means and methods for expressing the
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terms we use and use them to codify our jargon and simplify our
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communications.
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SI UNITS, STANDARDS AND NOTATION
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All the way back in 1866, the Metric System of units was legalized by
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the U.S. Government for trade in the United States.
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In 1960 the international "General Conference on Weights and Measures"
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met in Paris and named the metric system of units (based on the meter,
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kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin and candela) the "International System of
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Units". The Conference also established the abbreviation "SI" as the official
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abbreviation, to be used in all languages.
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The SI units are used to derive units of measurement for all physical
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quantities and phenomena. There are only seven basic SI "base units", these
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are:
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NAME SYMBOL QUANTITY
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-------------------------------------------------
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ampere A electric current
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candela cd luminous intensity
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meter m length
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kelvin K thermodynamic temperature
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kilogram kg mass
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mole mol amount of substance
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second s time
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The SI derived units and supplementary units are listed here with applicable
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derivative equations:
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NAME SYMBOL QUANTITY DERIVED BY
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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coulomb C quantity of electricity A*s
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farad F capacitance A*s/V
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henry H inductance V*s/A
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hertz Hz frequency s^-
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joule J energy or work N*m
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lumen lm luminous flux cd*sr
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lux lx illuminance lm/m^2
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newton N force kg*m/s^2
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ohm (upper case omega) electric resistance V/A
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pascal Pa pressure N/m^2
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radian rad plane angle
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steradian sr solid angle
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tesla T magnetic flux density Wb/m^2
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volt V potential difference W/A
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watt W power J/s
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weber Wb magnetic flux V*s
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NAME SYMBOL QUANTITY
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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ampere per meter A/m magnetic field strength
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candela per square meter cd/m^2 luminance
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joule per kelvin J/K entropy
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joule per kilogram kelvin J/(kg*K) specific heat capacity
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kilogram per cubic meter kg/m^3 mass density (density)
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meter per second m/s speed, velocity
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meter per second per second m/s^2 acceleration
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square meter m^2 area
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cubic meter m^3 volume
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square meter per second m^2/s kinematic viscosity
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newton-second per square meter N*s/m^2 dynamic viscosity
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1 per second s^- radioactivity
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radian per second rad/s angular velocity
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radian per second per second rad/s^2 angular acceleration
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volt per meter V/m electric field strength
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watt per meter kelvin W/(m*K) thermal conductivity
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watt per steradian W/sr radiant intensity
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DEFINITIONS OF SI UNITS
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(The wording used by the Conference may seem a bit stilted, but it is
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carefully chosen for semantic clarity to make the definitions unambiguous.)
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The ampere is that constant current which, if maintained in two straight
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parallel conductors of infinite length, of negligible circular cross section,
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and placed 1 meter apart in vacuum, would produce between these conductors a
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force equal to 2E-7 newton per meter of length.
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The candela is the luminous intensity, in the perpendicular direction, of a
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surface of 1/600,000 square meter of a blackbody at the temperature of
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freezing platinum under a pressure of 101,325 newtons per square meter.
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The coulomb is the quantity of electricity transported in 1 second by the
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current of 1 ampere.
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The farad is the capacitance of a capacitor between the plates of which
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there appears a difference of potential of 1 volt when it is charged by a
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quantity of electricity equal to 1 coulomb.
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The henry is the inductance of a closed circuit in which an electromotive
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force of 1 volt is produced when the electric current in the circuit varies
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uniformly at a rate of 1 ampere per second.
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The joule is the work done when the point of application of 1 newton is
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displaced a distance of 1 meter in the direction of the force.
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The kelvin , the unit of thermodynamic temperature, is the fraction 1/273.16
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of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.
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The kilogram is the unit of mass; it is equal to the mass of the
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international prototype of the kilogram. (The international prototype of the
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kilogram is a particular cylinder of platinum-irridium alloy which is
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preserved in a vault at Sevres, France, by the International Bureau of Weights
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and Measures.)
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The lumen is the luminous flux emitted in a solid angle of 1 steradian by a
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uniform point source having an intensity of 1 candela.
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The meter is the length equal to 1,650,763.73 wavelengths in vacuum of the
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radiation corresponding to the transition between the levels 2p sub 10, and 5d
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sub 5 of the krypton-86 atom.
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The mole is the amount of substance of a system which contains as many
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elementary entities as there are carbon atoms in 12 grams of carbon 12. The
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elementary entities must be specified and may be atoms, molecules, ions,
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electrons, other particles or specified groups of such particles.
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The newton is that force which gives to a mass of 1 kilogram an acceleration
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of 1 meter per second per second.
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The ohm is the electric resistance between two points of a conductor when a
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constant difference of potential of 1 volt, applied between these two points,
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produces in this conductor a current of 1 ampere, this conductor not being the
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source of any electromotive force.
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The radian is the plane angle between two radii of a circle which cut off on
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the circumference an arc equal in length to the radius.
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The second is the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation
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corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground
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state of the cesium-133 atom.
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The steradian is the solid angle which, having its vertex in the center of a
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sphere, cuts off an area of the surface of the sphere equal to that of a
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square with sides of length equal to the radius of the sphere.
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The volt is the difference of electric potential between two points of a
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conducting wire carrying a constant current of 1 ampere, when the power
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dissipated between these points is equal to 1 watt.
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The watt is the power which gives rise to the production of energy at the
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rate of 1 joule per second.
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The weber is the magnetic flux which, linking a circuit of one turn,
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produces in it an electromotive force of 1 volt as it is reduced to zero at a
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uniform rate in 1 second.
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SI PREFIXES
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The names of multiples and submultiples of any SI unit are formed by
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application of the prefixes:
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MULTIPLIER PREFIX SYMBOL TIMES 1, IS EQUAL TO:
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---------- ------ ------ --------------------------
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10^18 exa E 1 000 000 000 000 000 000
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10^15 peta P 1 000 000 000 000 000
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10^12 tera T 1 000 000 000 000
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10^9 giga G 1 000 000 000
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10^6 mega M 1 000 000
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10^3 kilo k 1 000
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10^2 hecto h 100
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10 deka da 10
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0 -- -- 1 (unity)
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10^-1 deci d .1
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10^-2 centi c .01
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10^-3 milli m .001
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10^-6 micro u .000 001
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10^-9 nano n .000 000 001
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10^-12 pico p .000 000 000 001
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10^-15 femto f .000 000 000 000 001
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10^-18 atto a .000 000 000 000 000 001
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Some examples: ten-thousand grams is written; 10 kg, 20,000 cycles per
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second is written; 20 kHz, 10-million hertz is written; 10 MHz, and 250
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billionths of a weber per meter of magnetic flux is written; 250 nWb/m.
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Always use less than 1000 units with an SI prefix; "1000 MGS" is advertizing
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hyperbole and should be written " 1 g " only.
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SI prefixes and units should be written together and then set off by a
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space (single space in print) from their numerators. For example; use the
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form " 35 mm " instead of " 35mm " and " 1 kHz " instead of " 1k Hz ".
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When writing use standard SI formats and be consistent. You should
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consult National Bureau of Standards publication 330, (1977) for details on
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usage.
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Never combine SI prefixes directly, that is, write 10^-10 farads as 100
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pF instead of 0.1 micro-microfarads (uuF). Keep in mind that whenever you
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write out a unit name longhand, the rule is that the name is all lower case,
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but when abbreviating, the first letter is upper case if the unit is named
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after a person and lower case if it is not; examples: V = volt for Volta, F =
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farad for Faraday, T = tesla for Tesla, and so on. Letter m = meter, s =
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second, rad = radian, and so on. Revolutions per minute may be written only
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as r/min, miles per hour may be written only as mi./hr, and inches per second
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may be written only as in./s and so on.
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In addition to the correct upper and lower case, prefixes and
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combinations, there is also a conventional text spacing for SI units and
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abbreviations. Write 20 Hz, rather than 20Hz. Write 20 kHz, rather than
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20k Hz, and so on. Always separate the numerator of a unit from its prefix
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and/or unit name, but do not separate the prefix and name.
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SCIENTIFIC AND ENGINEERING NOTATION
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(NOTE: "E" stands for power of 10 exponent.)
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Scientific notation is used to make big and small numbers easy to handle.
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Engineering notation is similar to scientific notation except that it uses
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thousands exclusively, rather than tens like scientific notation.
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The number 100 could be written 1E2 (1*10^2) or 10^2 in scientific
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notation, but would be written only as 100 in engineering notation. The
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number 12,000 would be written 1.2E4 (1.2*10^4) in scientific, and written
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12E3 (12*10^3) in engineering notation. Here is a partial listing of possible
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Scientific and Engineering notation prefixes:
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SCIENTIFIC ENGINEERING SCIENTIFIC ENGINEERING
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---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
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10^-18 = 1 a 10^1 = 10
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10^-17 = 10 a 10^2 = 100
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10^-16 = 100 a 10^3 = 1 k
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10^-15 = 1 f 10^4 = 10 k
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10^-14 = 10 f 10^5 = 100 k
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10^-13 = 100 f 10^6 = 1 M
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10^-12 = 1 p 10^7 = 10 M
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10^-11 = 10 p 10^8 = 100 M
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10^-10 = 100 p 10^9 = 1 G
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10^-9 = 1 n 10^10 = 10 G
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10^-8 = 10 n 10^11 = 100 G
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10^-7 = 100 n 10^12 = 1 T
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10^-6 = 1 u 10^13 = 10 T
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10^-5 = 10 u 10^14 = 100 T
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10^-4 = 100 u 10^15 = 1 P
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10^-3 = 1 m 10^16 = 10 P
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10^-2 = 10 m 10^17 = 100 P
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10^-1 = 100 m 10^18 = 1 E
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10^0 = 1 10^19 = 10 E
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10^20 = 100 E
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Engineering notation is used by default when we speak because the
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numerical values of the spoken names of SI prefixes run in increments of
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thousands such as; kilohertz, microfarads, millihenrys and megaohms
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(pronounced "megohms"). The spoken term "20 kilohertz" is already in
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engineering notation, and would be written on paper as 20E3 (20*10^3) hertz in
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strict engineering notation and as 2E4 (2*10^4) in scientific notation if it
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were not written in the more familiar form, 20 kHz.
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In either case, scientific or engineering, the rule is: for numbers
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greater than 1, the En part of the figure indicates the number of decimal
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places to the right that zeros will be added to the original number. For
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numbers smaller than 1, the E-n part of the figure indicates the number of
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decimal places to the left of the original number that the decimal point
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itself should be moved. The small "n" and "-n" here stand for the digits in
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the exponent itself.
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A definitive phamphlet describing SI units, conversions between SI units,
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older CGS and MKS units and units outside the SI system of units is available
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in the form of NASA Publication SP-7012, (1973). Inquire to the U.S.
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Government Printing Office in Pueblo, Colorado or in Washington, D.C. for this
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and other publications about SI units, their use and history.
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END
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