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- Archive-name: metric-system-faq
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- Last-modified: $Date: 2009-09-09 14:12:11 +0100 (Wed, 09 Sep 2009) $
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- URL: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/metric-system-faq.txt
-
- Metric System FAQ
- -----------------
-
- This regular posting to the USENET group misc.metric-system provides a
- brief introduction, collects useful references, and answers some
- frequently asked questions.
-
- A note on the character set: This file was written and distributed in
- the Unicode UTF-8 encoding. If "©" does not show up as a copyright
- sign, chances are that the encoding has been corrupted on the way to
- you or that your news reader lacks support for the MIME or UTF-8
- standards. If "Ω" does not show up as a Greek capital letter omega,
- chances are that chosing a different font with a larger Unicode
- repertoire to read this text may help.
-
- Suggestions for improvement are welcome! Γÿ║
-
- Markus Kuhn
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/
-
-
- Contents
- --------
-
- 1 Basics
-
- 1.1 What is the International System of Units (SI)?
- 1.2 What is the history of the metric system?
- 1.3 Which countries have yet to fully adopt the metric system?
- 1.4 What are the advantages of the metric system?
- 1.5 How can I make myself more familiar with the metric system?
- 1.6 Where are good web sites related to the metric system?
- 1.7 Are there any good books or newsletters on the metric system?
- 1.8 What are the SI base units and how are they currently defined?
- 1.9 What are the SI derived units with a special name?
- 1.10 Who were the SI units named after?
- 1.11 What are the SI prefixes?
- 1.12 What is the correct way of writing metric units?
-
- 2 Metric product specifications
-
- 2.1 What are preferred numbers or Renard numbers?
- 2.2 How do metric paper sizes work?
- 2.3 How do metric threads work?
- 2.4 How do metric clothes sizes work?
- 2.5 What inch-based standards are widely used in metric countries?
- 2.5.1 Metric water-pipe thread designations
- 2.5.2 Metric bicycle tire and rim designations
- 2.5.3 Shotgun gauge sizes
- 2.6 What metric standards are commonly known under an inch name?
-
- 3 Misc
-
- 3.1 Why is there a newsgroup on the metric system?
- 3.2 Where can I look up unit conversion factors?
- 3.3 What is the exact international definition of some non-SI units?
- 3.4 What are calories?
- 3.5 What are FFUs and WOMBAT units?
- 3.6 Does kilo mean 1024 in computing?
- 3.7 What are the official short symbols for bit and byte?
- 3.8 What does the "e" symbol found on many packaged goods mean?
- 3.9 How are metric units used in the kitchen?
- 3.10 How to convert US customary recipes into metric?
-
-
- 1 Basics
- =========
-
-
- 1.1 What is the International System of Units (SI)?
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- The "International System of Units" is the modern definition of what
- is colloquially known in the English-speaking world as the "metric
- system". Its name is commonly abbreviated as "SI", short for the
- French "Le Système International d'Unites".
-
- The SI is built on the seven base units metre, kilogram, second,
- ampere, kelvin, mole, and candela for measuring length, mass, time,
- electric current, thermodynamic temperature, amount of substance and
- luminosity.
-
- Units for measuring all other quantities are derived in the SI by
- multiplying and dividing these base units. This leads to a "coherent"
- system of units that almost eliminates the need for unit conversion
- factors in calculations. A list of 22 derived SI units have names of
- their own, for example newton, pascal, joule, volt, ohm, and watt.
-
- In order to provide conveniently sized units for all applications, the
- SI defines a set of prefixes -- such as milli, micro, nano, kilo,
- mega, and giga -- that can be used to derive decimal multiples or
- submultiples of units. The use of SI prefixes introduces conversion
- factors in calculations, but these are all powers of ten, which are
- trivial to apply in mental arithmetic by shifting the decimal point.
-
-
- 1.2 What is the history of the metric system?
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- A very brief scientific history of the metric system:
-
- The origin of the SI dates back to the early 1790s, when a coherent
- system of weights and measures with decimal multiples and fractions
- was proposed in France. On 22 June 1799, two platinum standards
- representing the metre and the kilogram were manufactured in London
- and deposited in Paris. In 1832, the German astronomer Gauss made a
- strong case for the use of the metric system in the physical sciences
- and proposed extensions for measuring magnetic fields. The British
- physicists Maxwell and Thomson led in 1874 the extension of Gauss'
- proposal to the CGS. This system of units for electromagnetic theory
- was derived from the base units centimetre, gram and second and found
- some use in experimental physics. However, the sizes of some of the
- CGS units turned out to be inconvenient. This lead in the 1880s in
- British and international scientific organizations to the development
- of a variant system with the base units metre, kilogram and second,
- known as MKS. This system introduced the modern electricity units
- volt, ampere, and ohm. In 1901, the Italian physicist Giorgi proposed
- a minor modification of the MKS system, turning the ampere into a
- fourth base unit, leading to the MKSA system of units that finally
- became internationally accepted after long discussions in 1946. In
- 1954, two more base units for temperature (kelvin) and luminosity
- (candela) were added to the MKSA system, which was renamed in 1960
- into the International System of Units (SI). Finally, in 1971, the SI
- as it is used today was completed by adding the mole as the base unit
- for amount of substance.
-
- A very brief legal history of the metric system:
-
- Metric units became the only legally accepted weights and measures in
- Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg in 1820, followed by France
- in 1837. They were rapidly adopted between 1850 and 1900 across
- Continental Europe and Latin America. The metric system became the
- subject of an international treaty, the Metre Convention of 1875. This
- created the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (Bureau
- International des Poids et Mesures, BIPM) in Paris, the body in charge
- of maintaining the metric system. Its exact definition has since then
- been periodically reviewed and revised by the International Conference
- of Weights and Measures (Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures,
- CGPM). It continued to spread around the world during the first half
- of the 20th century. Among the last developed countries to convert
- were South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Canada in the early
- 1970s.
-
- More information:
-
- - http://www.bipm.org/en/si/history-si/
- - http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/#metric
- - Pat Naughtin's articles
- http://metricationmatters.com/who-invented-the-metric-system.html
- http://metricationmatters.com/docs/USAMetricSystemHistory.pdf
- elaborate some of the early intellectual history of the metric system.
-
-
- 1.3 Which countries have yet to fully adopt the metric system?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- British industry converted successfully to the metric system in the
- 1960s. But with continued legal validity of inch-pound units, takeup
- of the metric system by the British public remained a slow process for
- three decades, which is still in progress. The pound finally lost its
- status as a legal unit of weight in the United Kingdom on 1 January
- 2000. The legal use of non-metric units is now limited in Britain to a
- few special fields, which have been summed up jokingly as "drinking
- and driving":
-
- - mile, yard, foot or inch for road traffic signs, distance
- and speed measurement
-
- - pint for dispensing draught beer and cider
-
- - pint for milk in returnable containers
-
- - acre for land registration
- (actually no longer used today by UK land registries)
-
- - troy ounce for transactions in precious metals
-
- - units used in international conventions for air and sea transport
-
- [http://www.legislation.hmso.gov.uk/si/si1995/Uksi_19951804_en_1.htm]
-
- British media coverage continues to use non-metric units frequently
- alongside metric units, in particular feet and inches for the size of
- humans and stones for their weight. Weather reports add the occasional
- Fahrenheit temperature as a courtesy to the older generation, but air
- temperature is predominantly reported in degrees Celsius today.
-
- The report "A very British mess", prepared in 2004 by the UK metric
- association, gives a more detailed picture of the mixed use of units
- in British legislation and everyday life:
-
- http://www.ukma.org.uk/Docs/VBM.pdf
-
- Progress in the Republic of Ireland has been somewhat faster than in
- Britain. For example, speed limits on Irish road signs became fully
- metric in January 2005.
-
- The United States is today the last country in which the use of
- inch-pound units is required by law in many areas. Most other
- countries do not even legally recognize inch-pound units. US media
- coverage still uses almost exclusively inch-pound-fahrenheit units. A
- dual labeling requirement for retail products was introduced in
- 1992. A lobbying campaign "Coalition for Permissible Metric-Only
- Labeling" supported by several large US manufacturers is now underway
- to make the use of inch-pound units in consumer products optional in
- federal law. The proposed change would allow manufacturers to simplify
- US labels such as "24 fl. oz. (1 Pint 8 fl. oz.) 710 mL" to something
- as neat and globally acceptable as "710 mL". US manufacturers suffer
- at the moment the problem that the US customary units for volume,
- which are mandatory in the US, differ from the Imperial units of the
- same name and are therefore illegal for use in the United
- Kingdom. This leads to separate labels and causes additional costs for
- US manufacturers who want to export to Britain.
-
- Canada has switched to the metric system in the late 1970s, but
- inch-pound units remain some part of daily life in Canada due to its
- close economic ties with the US. For example, Canada is the only other
- country in the world that uses the US "Letter" paper size instead of
- the international standard A4 format.
-
- If your teacher has asked you to find out, which three countries have
- not yet introduced the metric system, chances are that the expected
- answer is "United States, Liberia and Burma" (the last of these is
- called Myanmar today). This answer is almost certainly out of
- date. The widely-quoted statement that these are the last three
- countries not to have introduced the metric system may have originated
- in some 1970s US government report and appears to have been mentioned
- for a while in the CIA World Factbook. Although the introduction of
- the metric system is clearly slowest in the US, compared to any other
- developed country, it is widely used today in the US in selected
- areas. Little authoritative information can be found on what the legal
- or customary units are in Liberia and Burma today. Anecdotal evidence
- from visitors and trading partners suggests that both are essentially
- metric. The misc.metric-system readers are still eagerly awaiting
- knowledgeable first-hand reports from people living in these
- countries.
-
- More information:
-
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrication
-
-
- 1.4 What are the advantages of the metric system?
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- This question comes up in misc.metric-system usually in discussions
- with US Americans who see no compelling reason for why the United
- States should make a serious effort to abandon their customary
- inch-pound units and move on to the metric system.
-
- The most frequently given answers include:
-
- - Because practically everyone uses it
-
- Americans who have never left their country may not realize that
- their customary system of inch-pound units is today practically
- unknown in most countries. For more than 95% of the world
- population, the metric system is the customary system of units,
- and for more than half of the industrialized world, it has been
- for at least a century. Products designed in non-metric units or
- using non-metric standards can cause serious maintenance and
- compatibility problems for customers in major world markets and do
- place a manufacturer at a disadvantage.
-
- - Because using two incompatible systems causes unnecessary friction
-
- The United States lacks a coherent system of units. Economic
- realities, international standards, and the short-comings of the
- inch-pound system (e.g., lack of electrical and chemical units,
- lack of small subunits) force it already to use the metric system
- alongside its customary inch-pound units. American students waste
- at least half a year of mathematics education with developing
- unit-conversion skills (both within the inch-pound system and
- between inch-pound and metric) that are utterly irrelevant in the
- metric-only rest of the world. [The study "Education System
- Benefits of U.S. Metric Conversion", by Richard P. Phelps,
- published in Evaluation Review, February 1996, claimed that
- teaching solely metric measurements could save an estimated 82
- days of mathematics instruction-time annually, worth over 17
- billion dollars.]
-
- - Because it dramatically reduces conversion factors in calculations
-
- In spite of a significant amount of secondary school time being
- wasted in the United States in science and math education with
- training the use of conversion factors between the bewildering set
- of units in use there, only few educated Americans know by heart
- how to convert between gallons and cubic feet or inches and miles.
- The inch-pound system suffers from a bewildering, random and
- completely unsystematic set of conversion factors between units
- for the same quantity, for instance 1 mile = 1760 yards and 1 US
- gallon = 231 cubic inches. It also suffers from the use of too
- many different units for the same quantity. Energy alone, for
- example, is measured in the US in calories, british thermal units,
- ergs, feet pound-force, quads, therms, tons of TNT,
- kilowatt-hours, electron volts, and joules, and power is measured
- in ergs per second, foot pound-force per second, several types of
- horsepowers, and watts.
-
- Users of the metric system, on the other hand, have to use
- conversion factors only where there are significant physical
- reasons for using alternative units to express some situation. An
- example is the choice between molar concentration (a count of
- molecules better describes a chemical reaction balance) and a mass
- concentration (which describes better how a pharmacist prepares
- medication) in medicine. The main other reason for using
- conversion factors in the metric world is the continued use of
- non-decimal multiples of the second (hour, day, year).
-
- - Because metric dimensions are easier to divide by three
-
- A commonly brought up -- but misleading -- claim is that the
- inch-pound system supports division by three. While it is true
- that the factor three appears in the inch-foot and foot-yard
- conversion factors, this argument fails for the rest of the
- system. In practice, people find that metric dimensions are far
- easier to subdivide by various factors, as it is easier to move to
- smaller subunits and as it is more common in the metric world to
- use standardized preferred number sequences. For example, in the
- British building industry (see British Standard BS 6750), it is
- customary to chose major design dimensions (e.g., grid lines on a
- building plan) as multiples of 300, 600, or 1200 mm. As a result,
- common building dimensions can be divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10,
- 12, 15, 20, 24, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 75, 100, 120, 150, 200, and
- 300, without having to resort to millimetre fractions. Even
- without such precautions, it is instantly obvious that one
- kilometre divided by three is 333 1/3 metres and 1/3 L = 333 1/3
- mL. On the other hand, even inch-pound enthusiasts are a bit
- pressed when asked what 1/3 mile is in yards (answer: 586 2/3) or
- what 1/3 lb is in ounces (5 1/3). Although the use of decimal
- fractions is preferred in the metric system, because this
- simplifies the mental conversion between different unit prefixes,
- there is no reason why vulgar fractions cannot be used where it
- seems appropriate.
-
- - Because it is the only properly maintained system
-
- The inch-pound system used in the United States has essentially
- stopped evolving more than 200 years ago when the metric system
- emerged. Although it would, in principle, have been possible to
- extend the inch-pound system into a coherent and even decimal
- system of units, this never happened. The US customary system of
- units uses the inch and pound only for mechanical quantities. It
- had to copy, for example, all its electrical units (volt, ampere,
- watt, ohm) from the metric system. The length of the inch still
- differed noticeably between several English-speaking countries as
- late as World War II, which interfered with the exchange of
- precision equipment. It had to be redefined in 1959, when 1 inch
- finally became 25.4 mm. At this point, industries in all
- English-speaking countries -- apart from the United States --
- decided to abandon the inch entirely for precision work, and later
- also for general use.
-
-
- 1.5 How can I make myself more familiar with the metric system?
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The metric system is today widely used in Britain. In the United
- States, it clearly dominates so far at least in science, medicine, and
- in many industries (electronics, automobile, etc.). But as long as
- inch-pound units appear in the media and in consumer communication
- (advertisement, product labels), many people will end up feeling more
- familiar with them, in particular the generation that went through
- secondary education before the 1970s.
-
- Good knowledge of a few important reference values make units easy to
- visualize, even where they are not yet encountered in daily life. This
- list is a suggestion of approximate metric values that every educated
- adult may want to be familiar with. Also useful for trivial-pursuit
- type games.
-
-
- A) Humans
-
- Typical height of an adult: 1.60-1.90 m
- Typical weight of an adult: 50-90 kg
-
- [The "body mass index (BMI)" is the weight in kilograms divided by
- the height in metres squared. BMI values of 18-25 kg/m┬▓ are
- considered normal, values outside this range can mean an increased
- disease risk.]
-
- Keeping in mind that the size of most adults varies by about 20%,
- the following are easy to remember estimates for typical values:
-
- Width of an adult hand or foot: 10 cm
-
- Width of the nail of the little finger: 1 cm
-
- Maximum distance between elbows: 1 m
-
- Height of the hip above ground: 1 m
-
- Length of a moderately large step: 1 m
-
- Foot length: 25 cm
-
- Daily energy needed: 10 MJ (men)
- 8 MJ (women)
-
- Energy of a healthy meal: 2 MJ
-
- Daily water needed: 2 L
-
- Blood volume: 5 L
-
- Lung capacity: 5 L
-
- B) General Physics
-
- Speed of sound (in air): 340 m/s
-
- Speed of light (in air or vacuum): 300 000 km/s
-
- Acceleration of free fall (Earth): 10 m/s┬▓
-
- Atmospheric pressure (Earth): 100 kPa
-
- Density of water: 1000 kg/m┬│ = 1 kg/L
-
- C) Geology and Astronomy
-
- Distance pole to equator (Earth): 10 000 km = 10 Mm
-
- Length of the Earth equator: 40 000 km = 40 Mm
-
- Altitude of geostationary Earth orbit: 36 000 km = 36 Mm
-
- Distance Earth-Sun: 150 Gm
-
- Diameter of solar system: 12 Tm
-
- Diameter of our galaxy: 1 Zm
-
- Distance to most distant visible objects: 100 Ym
-
- D) Traffic
-
- Walking speed 5 km/h
-
- Cycling speed 20 km/h
-
- Speed limit in traffic-calmed areas: 30 km/h
-
- Speed limits on urban roads: 50-60 km/h
-
- Speed limits on rural roads: 60-80 km/h
-
- Speed limits on highways: 90-130 km/h
-
- Long-distance average car speed: 100 km/h
-
- Cruise speed of passenger planes: 600-800 km/h
-
- Cruise altitude of passenger planes: 10 km
-
- Official altitude boundary between Earth's
- atmosphere and space ("Karman line"): 100 km
-
- E) Temperatures
-
- Lowest possible temperature: -273.15 ┬░C = 0 K
-
- Typical freezer temperature: -18 ┬░C
-
- Freezing water/melting ice: 0 ┬░C
-
- Drink with many ice cubes: 0 ┬░C
-
- Temperature of highest density of water: 4 ┬░C
-
- Typical refrigerator temperature: 4-8 ┬░C
-
- Comfortable office room temperature: 20-25 ┬░C
- (same for swimming-pool water)
-
- Hot day (for Britain): 25-35 ┬░C
- (same for baby bath water)
-
- Body temperature: 37 ┬░C
-
- Fever temperatures: 38-40 ┬░C
-
- Deadly fever: 41-42 ┬░C
-
- Proteins denaturate starting from: 45-50 ┬░C
- (in cooking: egg becomes solid)
-
- Food poisoning bacteria might grow: 5-55 ┬░C
-
- Food poisoning bacteria die: 60 ┬░C
-
- Flour absorbs most water starting at: 70 ┬░C
- (minimum temperature dough/batter needs
- to reach in any kind of baking)
-
- Alcohol boils: 78 ┬░C
-
- Best temperature for green tea (Japan): 80 ┬░C
-
- Water boils (at sea level): 100 ┬░C
-
- Typical baking-oven air temperature: 150-220 ┬░C
-
- Washing machine settings: 30, 40, 50, 60, 95 ┬░C
-
- F) Angles
-
- While degrees remain popular and useful for large angles (30┬░, 45┬░,
- 60┬░, 90┬░, etc.), the radian is extremely convenient and intuitive
- for small angles, for example those covered by a pixel of a digital
- camera.
-
- 1 mm seen from 1 m distance: 1 mrad
- 1 mm seen from 1 km distance: 1 ┬╡rad
- 1 m at the "end of the universe" (100 Ym): 0.01 yrad
-
- The steradian is used mostly in the context of describing the
- intensity of radiation.
-
- 1 mm┬▓ seen from 1 m distance: 1 ┬╡sr
- 1 mm┬▓ seen from 1 km distance: 1 psr
-
-
- 1.6 Where are good web sites related to the metric system?
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) is the
- international organization in charge of maintaining the International
- System of Units:
-
- http://www.bipm.org/
-
- The BIPM's "SI Brochure" is the official 72-page in-depth description
- of the International System of Units:
-
- http://www.bipm.org/en/publications/brochure/
-
- The Physics Laboratory of the US National Institute of Science and
- Technology (NIST) maintains an excellent web site on SI units:
-
- http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/
-
- In particular, NIST has published three highly recommendable guides to
- the SI:
-
- - The first focuses on the practical use of the SI in the United
- States, and features a very comprehensive conversion table for all
- units used in the United States, as well as detailed guidelines
- for the correct (US) spelling, abbreviation and typesetting of SI
- unit names:
-
- Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI)
- NIST Special Publication 811, 1995 Edition, by Barry N. Taylor.
- http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/
-
- - The second is simply the official United States version of the
- English SI brochure, which provides more information on the
- history of the SI:
-
- The International System of Units (SI)
- NIST Special Publication 330, 2001 Edition, Barry N. Taylor, Editor.
- http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP330/
-
- - Finally, for those looking for the legal definition of the SI in
- US legislation, there is:
-
- Interpretation of the International System of Units for
- the United States, Federal Register notice of July 28, 1998,
- 63 FR 40334-40340
- http://physics.nist.gov/Document/SIFedReg.pdf
-
- The Laws & Metric Group of NIST's Weights and Measures Division also
- maintains a comprehensive site on the metric system, with a particular
- focus on its legal role and history in the United States:
-
- http://www.nist.gov/metric
-
- The National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in Britain has some SI
- information:
-
- http://www.npl.co.uk/reference/
-
- The unit-of-measurement laws of all European Union member states are
- based on
-
- http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/en/consleg/pdf/1980/en_1980L0181_do_001.pdf
-
- The U.S. Metric Association (USMA) is a non-profit organization
- founded in 1916 that advocates US conversion to the International
- System of Units:
-
- http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/
-
- Its British counterpart, the UK metric association (UKMA), was founded
- in 1999:
-
- http://www.metric.org.uk/
-
- Two excellent online dictionaries of units are:
-
- http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/
- http://www.sizes.com/units/
-
- Wikipedia contains a number of related articles, for example:
-
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrication
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_system
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_prefixes
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_derived_units
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_31
-
- Other interesting web sites related to the metric system:
-
- http://www.metrication.com/
- http://www.metricationmatters.com/ (with monthly newsletter)
- http://www.metre.info/
-
-
- 1.7 Are there any good books or newsletters on the metric system?
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A fascinating book on the history of the metre and the considerations
- that led to its creation is:
-
- Ken Alder: The Measure of All Things. Free Press, October 2003,
- ISBN 0743216768.
-
- In June 1792, amidst the chaos of the French Revolution, two intrepid
- astronomers set out in opposite directions on an extraordinary
- journey. Starting in Paris, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Delambre would make
- his way north to Dunkirk, while Pierre-François-André Méchain voyaged
- south to Barcelona. Their mission was to measure the world, and their
- findings would help define the metre as one ten-millionth of the
- distance between the pole and the equator -- a standard that would be
- used "for all people, for all time."
-
- A very useful reference not only on the correct use of SI units, but
- on international standard conventions for mathematical and scientific
- notation in general is:
-
- ISO Standards Handbook: Quantities and units. 3rd ed., International
- Organization for Standardization, Geneva, 1993, 345 p.,
- ISBN 92-67-10185-4, 188.00 CHF
- http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/popstds/quantitiesandunits.html
-
- This unfortunately rather expensive book contains the full text
- of the following ISO standards:
-
- ISO 31:1992 Quantities and units
-
- Part 0: General principles
- Part 1: Space and time
- Part 2: Periodic and related phenomena
- Part 3: Mechanics
- Part 4: Heat
- Part 5: Electricity and magnetism
- Part 6: Light and related electromagnetic radiations
- Part 7: Acoustics
- Part 8: Physical chemistry and molecular physics
- Part 9: Atomic and nuclear physics
- Part 10: Nuclear reactions and ionizing radiations
- Part 11: Mathematical signs and symbols for use in
- the physical sciences and technology
- Part 12: Characteristic numbers
- Part 13: Solid state physics
-
- ISO 1000:1992 SI units and recommendations for the use of their
- multiples and of certain other units
-
- ISO 31 standardizes a significant part of the mathematical notation
- used in physical sciences and technology worldwide. Its various
- parts contains a pretty comprehensive table of physical quantities
- (e.g., speed, mass, frequency, resistance), and defines for each the
- standard variable name (e.g., v, m, f, R) that is normally used in
- textbooks, together with the appropriate SI unit and a brief
- explanation of the meaning of the quantity. ISO 31-0 contains
- detailed guidelines on how to use and write SI units in mathematical
- formulas and ISO 31-11 defines all the commonly used mathematical
- symbols and operators.
-
- ISO 1000 is a brief summary of the SI (shorter than ISO 31-0), plus
- an appendix that lists for some selected quantities and units the
- more commonly used prefixes.
-
- Especially authors and editors of scientific textbooks, teaching
- material and reference works that use SI units should make sure that
- they have easy access to a copy of ISO 31 or an equivalent national
- standard (e.g., BS 5775 in Britain).
-
- The unfortunately not less expensive German equivalent is:
-
- DIN-Taschenbuch 22: Einheiten und Begriffe f├╝r physikalische
- Größen. Deutsches Institut für Normung, 1999-03,
- ISBN 3-410-14463-3, 98.90 EUR
-
- A list of books on metrication is on:
-
- http://www.metrication.com/products/books.htm
-
- If you join the U.S. Metric Association, you will receive six times a
- year the "Metric Today" newsletter, with detailed updates on the
- progress of metrication in the US. Membership costs 30 USD anually (35
- USD abroad).
-
- http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/mtoday.htm
- http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/member.htm
-
- A very comprehensive book on current and historic units from all over
- the world is
-
- François Cardarelli: Encyclopaedia of scientific units,
- weights and measures: their SI equivalences and origins.
- Springer, 2003, 872 pages, ISBN 1-85233-682-X.
-
-
- 1.8 What are the SI base units and how are they currently defined?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- length: metre (m)
-
- The metre is the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum
- during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second.
-
- [Originally, the metre was chosen to approximate the distance
- between the north pole and the equator divided by ten million, such
- that a unit that is roughly the size of a step can also help to
- visualize large distances on the surface of the earth easily.]
-
- mass: kilogram (kg)
-
- The kilogram is the unit of mass; it is equal to the mass of the
- international prototype of the kilogram.
-
- [No independent lab experiment is known yet that provides a more
- stable reference for mass than the regular comparison with a lump of
- platinum-iridium alloy kept in a safe at the BIPM in Paris.]
-
- [Originally, the kilogram was chosen to approximate the mass of one
- litre (1/1000 m┬│) of water. This choice, combined with the second,
- also led to very convenient numbers for the Earth's gravity (about
- 10 m/s┬▓) and atmospheric pressure (about 100 kPa).]
-
- time: second (s)
-
- The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation
- corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of
- the ground state of the caesium 133 atom.
-
- [In other words: if you want to know how long a second is, buy an
- atomic clock that uses caesium, such as the classic Agilent/HP 5071A.]
-
- [Originally, the SI second was chosen to approximate the length of
- the astronomical second (1 day divided by 60 × 60 × 24) around 1820.]
-
- electric current: ampere (A)
-
- The ampere is that constant current which, if maintained in two
- straight parallel conductors of infinite length, of negligible
- circular cross-section, and placed 1 m apart in vacuum, would
- produce between these conductors a force equal to 2 × 10^-7 newton
- per metre of length.
-
- [In other words, the ampere is defined by setting the magnetic
- permeability of free space to 4π × 10^-7 H/m. This way,
- electromagnetic equations concerning spheres contain 4π, those
- concerning coils contain 2π and those dealing with straight wires
- lack π entirely.]
-
- thermodynamic temperature: kelvin (K)
-
- The kelvin, unit of thermodynamic temperature, is the fraction
- 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of
- water.
-
- [The celsius temperature scale divides the temperature interval of
- liquid water into 100 steps. The kelvin has the same size as the
- degree celsius, but its origin is moved to the lowest possible
- temperature (0 K = -273.15 ┬░C) to simplify gas calculations and
- avoid negative numbers. The triple point of water at 0.01 ┬░C is a
- more well-defined reference temperature than its melting temperature
- at some arbitrarily chosen pressure.]
-
- amount of substance: mole (mol)
-
- 1. The mole is the amount of substance of a system which contains as
- many elementary entities as there are atoms in 0.012 kilogram of
- carbon 12.
-
- 2. When the mole is used, the elementary entities must be specified
- and may be atoms, molecules, ions, electrons, other particles, or
- specified groups of such particles.
-
- [No technique is known yet to accurately count the number of
- molecules in a macroscopic amount of matter, therefore the current
- definition of the mole is no better than the definition of the
- kilogram.]
-
- luminous intensity: candela (cd)
-
- The candela is the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of a
- source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 × 10^12
- hertz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction of 1/683
- watt per steradian.
-
- [This is a psychophysical unit for describing how bright an average
- human eye perceives some electromagnetic radiation in the optical
- frequency bands. As such, it differs very much from the purely
- physical nature of the other units. The definition of the SI base
- unit for luminous intensity provides merely a calibration value that
- replaces an older one based on a reference candle. It has to be used
- together with sensitivity models of an average human eye that have
- been standardized by CIE. Many other physiological units are in use,
- such as the "phon" for perceived loudness and the "bark" for
- perceived audio frequency in acoustics, but none of these have made
- it into the SI, possibly because it is much more difficult to reach
- a consensus in audiology.]
-
- See also:
-
- http://www1.bipm.org/en/si/base_units/
-
-
- 1.9 What are the SI derived units with a special name?
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- Derived quantity unit name symbol in terms of base or
- other derived units
-
- plane angle radian rad 1 rad = 1 m/m = 1
- solid angle steradian sr 1 sr = 1 m┬▓/m┬▓ = 1
- frequency hertz Hz 1 Hz = 1 1/s
- force newton N 1 N = 1 kg┬╖m/s┬▓
- pressure, stress pascal Pa 1 Pa = 1 N/m┬▓
- energy, work, heat joule J 1 J = 1 N┬╖m
- power watt W 1 W = 1 J/s
- electric charge coulomb C 1 C = 1 A┬╖s
- electric potential volt V 1 V = 1 W/A
- capacitance farad F 1 F = 1 C/V
- electric resistance ohm Ω 1 Ω = 1 V/A
- electric conductance siemens S 1 S = 1 1/Ω
- magnetic flux weber Wb 1 Wb = 1 V┬╖s
- magnetic fluc density tesla T 1 T = 1 Wb/m┬▓
- inductance henry H 1 H = 1 Wb/A
- Celsius temperature deg. Celsius ┬░C 1 ┬░C = 1 K
- luminous flux lumen lm 1 lm = 1 cd┬╖sr
- illuminance lux lx 1 lx = 1 lm/m┬▓
- catalytic activity katal kat 1 kat = 1 mol/s
-
- Note: We have 0 ┬░C = 273.15 K and temperature differences of 1 ┬░C and
- 1 K are identical. Kelvin and degrees Celsius values can be converted
- into each other by adding or subtracting the number 273.15. The origin
- of the degrees Celsius scale is set 0.01 K below the triple-point
- temperature of water (273.16 K) and approximates the freezing
- temperature of water at standard pressure.
-
- Three more SI derived units have been defined for use in radiology and
- radioactive safety:
-
- radioactivity becquerel Bq 1 Bq = 1 1/s
- absorbed dose gray Gy 1 Gy = 1 J/kg
- dose equivalent sievert Sv 1 Sv = 1 J/kg
-
- Note: Different types of radiation (╬▒, ╬▓, ╬│, X-rays, neutrons, etc.)
- vary in the amount of damage they cause in biological tissue, even
- when the same energy is absorbed. While the physical unit gray is used
- to describe just the energy absorbed, the medical unit sievert is used
- where the absorbed energy has been multiplied with a quality factor to
- quantify the health risk better. This quality factor is 1 for X-rays,
- ╬│-rays, electrons, and muons. It goes up to 20 for heavier
- particles. [Details in ICRU Report 51 from http://www.icru.org/.]
-
- Note: only those unit symbols start with an uppercase letter where the
- name of the corresponding unit was derived from the name of a person.
-
- The following eight units are not SI units, but are accepted to be
- commonly used with or instead of SI units:
-
- time minute min 1 min = 60 s
- hour h 1 h = 60 min
- day d 1 d = 24 h
- plane angle degree ° 1° = (π/180) rad
- minute ' 1' = (1/60)┬░
- second " 1" = (1/60)'
- volume litre l, L 1 l = 1 dm┬│
- mass tonne t 1 t = 1000 kg
-
- Note: The litre would normally be abbreviated with a lowercase l, as
- it is not named after a person. However, the US interpretation of the
- SI prefers the capital letter L instead, to avoid confusion between l
- and 1.
-
- Note: The tonne (1000 kg) is also called "metric ton" in English, or
- often simply just "ton". The short form "ton" remains ambiguous
- though, because there are also a "short ton" of 907.18474 kg and a
- "long ton" of 1016.046909 kg still in use in the US.
-
- The following two units acceptable for use with or instead of SI
- units have values that are obtained experimentally:
-
- energy electron volt eV 1 eV = energy acquired by
- an electron passing
- through 1 V potential
- difference
- mass atomic unit u 1 u = 1/12 of the mass of
- one carbon-12 atom
-
-
- 1.10 Who were the SI units named after?
- ----------------------------------------
-
- The SI units whose symbols start with a capital letter are named after
- the following scientists:
-
- André Marie Ampère France 1775-1836
- Lord Kelvin (Sir William Thomson) Britain 1824-1907
- Sir Isaac Newton Britain 1643-1727
- Heinrich Hertz Germany 1857-1894
- Blaise Pascal France 1623-1662
- James Prescott Joule Britain 1818-1889
- James Watt Britain 1736-1819
- Charles Augustin de Coulomb France 1736-1806
- Alessandro Volta Italy 1745-1827
- Michael Faraday Britain 1791-1867
- Georg Simon Ohm Germany 1787-1854
- Werner von Siemens Germany 1816-1892
- Wilhelm Eduard Weber Germany 1804-1891
- Nikola Tesla USA 1856-1943
- Joseph Henry USA 1797-1878
- Anders Celsius Sweden 1701-1744
- Antoine Henri Becquerel France 1852-1908
- Louis Harold Gray Britain 1905-1965
- Rolf Maximilian Sievert Sweden 1896-1966
-
- There has been at least one attempt to add a fictious character to
- this list:
-
- In many English-speaking countries, the digit 1 lacks an upstroke in
- handwriting and is therefore difficult to distinguish from the letter
- l. In the 1970s, the CGPM received suggestions to change the symbol of
- the litre from the lowercase l to the uppercase L, to avoid such
- confusion. This would, of course, violate the rule that only symbols
- for units named after a person are capitalized in the SI, whereas the
- word litre derives from the Greek and Latin root litra. It took not
- long, before someone invented a hoax scientist, to help justify the
- capital L. The April 1978 issue of "CHEM 13 NEWS", a newsletter for
- Canadian high-school teachers, carried an article by Prof. Ken
- A. Woolner (University of Waterloo), that elaborated on the made-up
- biography of Claude Émile Jean-Baptiste Litre (1716-1778), an alleged
- French pioneer in chemical glassware and volumetric measurement, son
- of a family with a long tradition in wine-bottle manufacturing.
- Details of this story have been compiled in
-
- http://www.student.math.uwaterloo.ca/~stat231/stat231_01_02/w02/section3/fi1.2.pdf
-
-
- 1.11 What are the SI prefixes?
- -------------------------------
-
- 10 deca da | 0.1 deci d
- 100 hecto h | 0.01 centi c
- 1000 kilo k | 0.001 milli m
- 10^6 mega M | 10^-6 micro ┬╡
- 10^9 giga G | 10^-9 nano n
- 10^12 tera T | 10^-12 pico p
- 10^15 peta P | 10^-15 femto f
- 10^18 exa E | 10^-18 atto a
- 10^21 zetta Z | 10^-21 zepto z
- 10^24 yotta Y | 10^-24 yocto y
-
- Some rules about writing and using SI prefixes are worth remembering:
-
- - The symbols for the prefix kilo and everything below start with a
- lowercase letter, whereas mega and higher use an uppercase
- letter.
-
- [The reason why the boundary between lowercase and uppercase has
- been moved between kilo and mega is the fact that that kilo also
- appears in the unit kilogram, whose symbol must start with a
- lowercase letter to follow the rule that only units named after
- people are abbreviated with an uppercase symbol.]
-
- - SI prefixes bind to a unit stronger than any mathematical
- operator, that is 1 km┬▓ means a kilometre squared (as in 1 (km)┬▓)
- and not one kilosquaremeter (as in 1 k(m┬▓)).
-
- - SI prefixes are not allowed to be used on anything other than an
- unprefixed unit, in other words there is no such thing as a
- megakilometre or a kilosquaremetre.
-
- Note: Prefixes "myria" for 10^4 and "myrio" for 10^-4 are occasionally
- quoted in US dictionaries. These were never part of the SI nor are
- they mentioned in any BIPM or ISO document, and therefore should not
- be used today. They appear to date back to the earliest proposals for
- a metric system in the 1790s in France, but did not make it into the
- modern international system of units. The myria prefix survives to
- this day in the form of the myriameter (10 km) and myriagram (10 kg)
- that are listed in US law (15USC205). There is no official symbol
- defined today for either prefix, though "ma" and "mo" have been quoted
- as having been used in the past.
-
-
- 1.12 What is the correct way of writing metric units?
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- Each unit and prefix in the International System of Units has an
- official symbol (abbreviation) assigned to it. This symbol is
- identical in all languages. When writing down numeric quantities,
- especially in the more formal context of product descriptions,
- documentation, signs, scientific publications, etc., it is important
- to pay some attention to the accurate writing of the unit symbol.
-
- Here are the most important rules for abbreviating SI units:
-
- - Use exactly the standard symbols for prefixes and units listed
- in the tables above. Do not invent your own abbreviations.
-
- - Remember that there is a simple system for deciding which letters
- are uppercase or lowercase:
-
- - Symbols of units named after a person start uppercase.
- (E.g., newton, volt, weber use N, V, Wb.)
- - Other units start lowercase.
- (E.g., metre, second, lux use m, s, lx.)
- - Symbols of prefixes greater than 10┬│ (kilo) start uppercase.
- - All other prefix symbols start with a lowercase letter.
- - Further letters in a unit or prefix are always lowercase.
-
- (Correct examples: kHz, MHz)
-
- - Unit symbols are never used with a plural s.
-
- - Units symbols are never used with a period to indicate
- an abbreviation.
-
- - Division can be indicated by either a stroke (slash) or by a
- negative exponent, but never by a "p" for "per".
-
- - Square and cube are indicated by exponents 2 and 3, respectively.
-
- - The unit symbol is separated from the preceding number by a space
- character (with the exception of degrees, minutes and seconds of
- plane angle: 90┬░ 13' 59").
-
- - There is no space between a prefix and a unit.
-
- - In mathematical and technical writing, SI unit symbols should be
- typeset in an upright font, in order to distinguish them from
- variables, which are usually set in an italic font.
-
- Examples:
-
- Good: 60 km/h, 3.2 kHz, 40 kg, 3.6 mm, 80 g/m┬▓
-
- Bad: 60 kph, 3.2 Khz, 40 kgs, 3.6mm, 80-grms./sq.mtr.
-
- Whether a decimal comma (French, German, etc.) or decimal point
- (English) is used depends on the language. Either is valid for use
- with SI units. To avoid confusion, neither the comma nor the dot
- should be used to group digits together. Better use a space or
- thin-space character, if necessary.
-
- Good: 12 000 m
- Bad: 12,000 m (might be read as 12 m in France and 12 km in the US)
-
- Hints for word processing users:
-
- - The degree sign (┬░ as in ┬░C and 360┬░, Unicode U+00B0) is in some
- fonts easily confused with the Spanish masculine ordinal indicator
- sign (┬║, a raised little letter "o", as in 1┬║ for "premiero",
- Unicode U+00BA). In other fonts, the Spanish raised o is clearly
- distinguishable because it is underlined. It is therefore
- important, especially where the author has no control over the
- font used by the reader (email, web, etc.), to pick the correct
- character.
-
- Good: ┬░C
- Bad: ┬║C
-
- - The micro sign (┬╡) is at Unicode position U+00B5 (decimal: 181)
- and can be entered under Microsoft's Windows by pressing 0181 on
- the numeric keypad while pressing the Alt key.
-
- Other characters not found on every keyboard can be entered as
- well by entering the decimal Unicode value preceded by zero on the
- numeric keypad, while holding down the Alt key:
-
- Character Unicode value Unicode value Character
- name hexadecimal decimal
-
- no-break space U+00A0 160  
- degree sign U+00B0 176 ┬░
- superscript 2 U+00B2 178 ┬▓
- superscript 3 U+00B3 179 ┬│
- micro sign U+00B5 181 ┬╡
- ohm sign U+2126 8486 Ω
-
- Some keyboards with AltGr key provide these characters also via
- AltGr-d, AltGr-2, AltGr-3, AltGr-m, or similar combinations.
-
- While the short symbols for SI units are internationally standardized,
- at least for all languages that use the Latin alphabet, the spelling
- of unit names varies between languages and even countries. In
- English, unabbreviated unit names are not capitalized, even where they
- are named after people, and both the French -re and the Germanic -er
- ending of metre and litre are commonly used.
-
- Examples:
-
- French German English (GB) English (US)
-
- litre Liter litre liter
- metre Meter metre meter
-
- This FAQ uses the British English spellings of metre and litre, as
- they are used in ISO and BIPM documents.
-
- Some countries that do not use the Latin alphabet have standardized
- their own short symbols for SI units. The Russian standard GOST
- 8.417:1981, for example, specifies Cyrillic symbols м (m), кг (kg),
- с (s), А (A), К (K), моль (mol), кд (cd), etc. (Full list on
- <http://www.unics.uni-hannover.de/ntr/russisch/si-einheiten.html>.)
-
- There used to exist an international standard ISO 2955:1983
- ("Presentation of SI and other units in systems with limited character
- sets") that defined a list of unambiguous SI symbols for use with
- computers that can only display ASCII, or even only uppercase
- letters. This standard was withdrawn 2001. The ISO 8859-1 and ISO
- 10646 character sets are today widely enough available to make using
- the original SI symbols on computers feasible.
-
- There is no international standard for pronouncing the names of
- units. In particular, in English both KILL-o-metr and ki-LO-metr are
- commonly used. The former seems to be more common in Britain (short
- stress on the first syllable) and may have the slight advantage of
- being consistent with the English pronunciation of kilogram and
- kilohertz. (It is also the pronunciation of kilometre in other
- Germanic languages.)
-
- In spoken language, various colloquial short forms have evolved for SI
- units. For example, "kilo", "hecto" and "deca" are used in various
- countries for 1 kg, 100 g and 10 g when buying groceries. In the US
- military, a "klick" is 1 km or 1 km/h, depending on the context, and
- in the semiconductor industry a "micron" is 1 ┬╡m. A "kay" can be heard
- in some English-speaking countries referring to any of 1 km, 1 km/h, 1
- kg, 1 kHz, 1 kB, 1 kbit/s, again depending on the context. A "pound"
- refers to 500 g in many European countries, but it is less commonly
- used today than a decade or two ago. But none of these colloquial
- forms should be used in writing.
-
-
- 2 Metric product specifications
- ================================
-
-
- 2.1 What are preferred numbers or Renard numbers?
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- Product developers need to decide at some point, how large various
- characteristic dimensions of their design will be exactly. Even after
- taking into account all known restrictions and considerations, the
- exact choice of lengths, diameters, volumes, etc. can often still be
- picked quite randomly within some interval.
-
- Wouldn't it be nice if there were some recipe or guideline for making
- the choice of product dimensions less random? If there were one
- generic standard for a small set of preferred numbers, it would be
- more likely that a developer working in a different company made the
- same choice. Products would more frequently become compatible by
- chance. Say you design a gadget that will be fixed on a wall with two
- screws. A small set of preferred distances between mounting screws
- would make it less likely that new holes have to be drilled if your
- customer replaces an older gadget of similar size, whose designer
- hopefully chose the same distance.
-
- The French army engineer Col. Charles Renard proposed in the 1870s
- such a set of preferred numbers for use with the metric system, which
- became in 1952 the international standard ISO 3. Renard's preferred
- numbers divide the interval from 1 to 10 into 5, 10, 20, or 40
- steps. The factor between two consecutive numbers in a Renard series
- is constant (before rounding), namely the 5th, 10th, 20th or 40 root
- of 10 (1.58, 1.26, 1.12, and 1.06, respectively), leading to a
- geometric series. This way, the maximum relative error is minimized if
- an arbitrary number is replaced by the nearest Renard number
- multiplied by the appropriate power of 10.
-
- The most basic R5 series consists of these five rounded numbers:
-
- R5: 1.00 1.60 2.50 4.00 6.30
-
- Example: If our design constraints tell us that the two screws in our
- gadget can be spaced anywhere between 32 mm and 55 mm apart, we make
- it 40 mm, because 4 is in the R5 series of preferred numbers.
-
- Example: If you want to produce a set of nails with lengths between
- roughly 15 and 300 mm, then the application of the ISO 3 R5 series
- would lead to a product repertoire of 16 mm, 25 mm, 40 mm, 63 mm, 100
- mm, 160 mm and 250 mm long nails.
-
- If a finer resolution is needed, another five numbers are added and we
- end up with the R10 series:
-
- R10: 1.00 1.25 1.60 2.00 2.50 3.15 4.00 5.00 6.30 8.00
-
- If you design several prototypes of a product that may later have to
- be offered in several additional sizes, choosing characteristic
- dimensions from the Renard numbers will make sure that your prototypes
- will later fit nicely into an evenly spaced product repertoire.
-
- Where higher resolution is needed, the R20 and R40 series can be
- applied:
-
- R20: 1.00 1.12 1.25 1.40 1.60 1.80 2.00 2.24 2.50 2.80
- 3.15 3.55 4.00 4.50 5.00 5.60 6.30 7.10 8.00 9.00
-
- R40: 1.00 1.06 1.12 1.18 1.25 1.32 1.40 1.50 1.60 1.70
- 1.80 1.90 2.00 2.12 2.24 2.36 2.50 2.65 2.80 3.00
- 3.15 3.35 3.55 3.75 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75 5.00 5.30
- 5.60 6.00 6.30 6.70 7.10 7.50 8.00 8.50 9.00 9.50
-
- In some applications more rounded values are desirable, either
- because the numbers from the normal series would imply an
- unrealistically high accuracy, or because an integer value is needed
- (e.g., the number of teeth in a gear). For these, the more rounded
- versions of the Renard series have been defined:
-
- R5': 1 1.5 2.5 4 6
-
- R10': 1 1.25 1.6 2 2.5 3.2 4 5 6.3 8
-
- R10": 1 1.2 1.5 2 2.5 3 4 5 6 8
-
- R20': 1 1.1 1.25 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 2.2 2.5 2.8
- 3.2 3.6 4 4.5 5 5.6 6.3 7.1 8 9
-
- R20": 1 1.1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 2.2 2.5 2.8
- 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 7 8 9
-
- R40': 1 1.05 1.1 1.2 1.25 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7
- 1.8 1.9 2 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.8 3
- 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4 4.2 4.5 4.8 5 5.3
- 5.6 6 6.3 6.7 7.1 7.5 8 8.5 9 9.5
-
- Other more specialized preferred number schemes are in use in various
- fields. For example:
-
- - IEC 63 standardizes a preferred number series for resistors and
- capacitors, a variant of the Renard series that subdivides the
- interval from 1 to 10 into 6, 12, 24, etc. steps. These
- subdivisions ensure that when some random value is replaced with
- the nearest preferred number, the maximum error will be in the
- order of 20%, 10%, 5%, etc.:
-
- E6 (20%): 10 15 22 33 47 68
-
- E12 (10%): 10 12 15 18 22 27 33 39 47 56 68 82
-
- E24 ( 5%): 10 11 12 13 15 16 18 20 22 24 27 30
- 33 36 39 43 47 51 56 62 68 75 82 91
-
- - Paper sizes commonly use factors of sqrt(2), sqrt(sqrt(2)), or
- sqrt(sqrt(sqrt(2))) as factors between neighbor dimensions
- (Lichtenberg series, see next section). The sqrt(2) factor also
- appears between the standard metric pen thicknesses for technical
- drawings (0.13, 0.18, 0.25, 0.35, 0.50, 0.70, 1.00, 1.40, and 2.00
- mm). This way, the right pen size is available to continue a
- drawing that has been magnified to a different metric paper size.
-
- - In the building industry, major dimensions (e.g., grid lines on
- plans, distances between wall centers or surfaces) are multiples
- of 100 mm. This size is called the "basic module" and represented
- by the letter M. Preference is given to the multiples of 3 M (=
- 300 mm) and 6 M (= 600 mm) of the basic module. For larger
- dimensions, preference is also given to the multimodules 12 M (=
- 1.2 m), 15 M (= 1.5 m), 30 M (= 3 m), and 60 M (= 6 m). For
- smaller dimensions, the submodular increments 50 mm or 25 mm are
- used. (For details, see ISO 2848 or BS 6750.)
-
- - In computer engineering, the powers of two (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ...)
- multiplied by 1, 3 or 5 are frequently used as preferred numbers.
- These correspond to binary numbers that consist mostly of trailing
- zero bits, which are particularly easy to add and subtract in
- hardware. [Software developers should keep in mind though that
- using powers of 2 in software, especially with array sizes, may
- also have disadvantages, such as reduced CPU cache efficiency.]
-
-
- 2.2 How do metric paper sizes work?
- ------------------------------------
-
- The international standard paper formats defined in ISO 216 in the A,
- B and C series are used today in all countries worldwide except for
- the US and Canada.
-
- The formats have been defined as follows:
-
- - The width divided by the height of all ISO A, B, and C formats
- is the square root of 2 (= 1.41421...)
-
- - The A0 paper size has an area of one square metre.
-
- - You get the next higher format number by cutting the paper in two
- equal pieces (cutting parallel to the shorter side). The result will
- again have a 1 : sqrt(2) format (that's the big advantage of this format).
-
- - The size of a B-series paper is the geometric mean between the size of
- the corresponding A-series paper and the next bigger A-series paper.
- For example, the same magnification factor converts from A1 to B1
- and from B1 to A0.
-
- - The size of a C-series paper is the geometric mean between the size of
- the A-series and B-series paper with the same number.
-
- This means that the following formulas give the dimensions in metres:
-
- Width Height
- A-series 2 ^ (- 1/4 - n/2) 2 ^ (1/4 - n/2)
- B-series 2 ^ ( - n/2) 2 ^ (1/2 - n/2)
- C-series 2 ^ (- 1/8 - n/2) 2 ^ (3/8 - n/2)
-
- Larger sizes have smaller numbers.
-
- The official definitions of the ISO paper formats are obtained by
- rounding down to the next lower integer millimetre after each
- division:
-
- 4 A0 1682 × 2378
- 2 A0 1189 × 1682
- A0 841 × 1189 B0 1000 × 1414 C0 917 × 1297
- A1 594 × 841 B1 707 × 1000 C1 648 × 917
- A2 420 × 594 B2 500 × 707 C2 458 × 648
- A3 297 × 420 B3 353 × 500 C3 324 × 458
- A4 210 × 297 B4 250 × 353 C4 229 × 324
- A5 148 × 210 B5 176 × 250 C5 162 × 229
- A6 105 × 148 B6 125 × 176 C6 114 × 162
- A7 74 × 105 B7 88 × 125 C7 81 × 114
- A8 52 × 74 B8 62 × 88 C8 57 × 81
- A9 37 × 52 B9 44 × 62 C9 40 × 57
- A10 26 × 37 B10 31 × 44 C10 28 × 40
-
- The most popular sizes are perhaps:
-
- A0 technical drawings
- A4 letters, forms, faxes, magazines, documents
- A5, B5 books
- C4, C5, C6 envelopes
- B4, A3 supported by many copy machines, newspapers
-
- There are also strip formats possible for tickets, compliment cards,
- etc.:
-
- 1/3 A4 99 × 210
- 2/3 A4 198 × 210
- 1/4 A4 74 × 210
- 1/8 A4 37 × 210
- 1/4 A3 105 × 297
- 1/3 A5 70 × 148
- etc.
-
- All these formats are end formats, i.e. these are the dimensions of
- the paper delivered to the user/reader. Other standards define
- slightly bigger paper sizes for applications where the paper will be
- cut to the end format later (e.g., after binding).
-
- The A4 format used in almost all countries is 6 mm narrower and 18 mm
- taller than the US Letter format used exclusively in the US and
- Canada. This difference causes an enormous amount of havoc every day
- in document exchange with these countries. The introduction of A4
- paper as the general office format in the United States would be a
- very significant simplification and an enormous improvement. Only a
- top-level US government decision is likely to make this happen.
-
- For much more information, for example on how the Japanese JIS B sizes
- differ from the ISO ones, see
-
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-paper.html
-
-
- 2.3 How do metric threads work?
- --------------------------------
-
- The preferred ISO metric thread sizes for general purpose fasteners
- (coarse thread) are
-
- designation pitch tapping drill clearance holes
- close medium free
-
- M1.6 0.35 1.25 1.7 1.8 2.0
- M2 0.4 1.6 2.2 2.4 2.6
- M2.5 0.45 2.05 2.7 2.9 3.1
- M3 0.5 2.5 3.2 3.4 3.6
- M4 0.7 3.3 4.3 4.5 4.8
- M5 0.8 4.2 5.3 5.5 5.8
- M6 1.0 5.0 6.4 6.6 7.0
- M8 1.25 6.8 8.4 9.0 10.0
- M10 1.5 8.5 10.5 11.0 12.0
- M12 1.75 10.2 13.0 14.0 15.0
- M16 2.0 14.0 17.0 18.0 19.0
- M20 2.5 17.5 21.0 22.0 24.0
- M24 3.0 21.0 25.0 26.0 28.0
- M30 3.5 26.5 31.0 33.0 35.0
- M36 4.0 32.0 37.0 39.0 42.0
- M42 4.5 37.5 43.0 45.0 48.0
- M48 5.0 43.0 50.0 52.0 56.0
-
- The number naming the thread is the major diameter of the screw thread
- in millimetres. The thread angle is 60┬░. The pitch is the distance, in
- millimetres, that the screw will travel forward or backward during one
- rotation.
-
- The preferred standard pitch defined for each M-series thread is
- called the "coarse pitch". For special applications (e.g., thin wall
- tubes), there are also "fine pitch" variants defined. In their
- designation, the pitch is added after a cross (×), as in
-
- M8×1, M10×1, M12×1.5, ...
-
- [This section is work in progress ... contributions welcome.]
-
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_metric_screw_thread
- http://www.metrication.com/engineering/threads.htm
- http://www.efunda.com/DesignStandards/screws/screwm_coarse.cfm
-
-
- 2.4 How do metric clothes sizes work?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Even in Europe, most clothes are currently still labelled using some
- ad-hoc dress size number that has no obvious or even well-defined
- relation with actual body dimensions. Ad-hoc dress sizes vary
- significantly between countries, many are inadequate because they are
- based on obsolete 1950s data of typical body dimensions, and some
- manufacturers have started to inflate women's dress sizes to
- compensate for the average weight gain of middle aged adults. As a
- result, dress sizes have lost much of their usefulness. The situation
- is particularly problematic for mail and online ordering.
-
- Therefore, the European standards committee CEN TC 248 WG 10 has set
- out to develop a new system of metric cloth sizes. The system is still
- being developed, but the first three parts of the resulting European
- Standard EN 13402 have already been published.
-
- The core idea is this:
-
- Under the EN 13402 system, clothes will be labelled based on the body
- dimensions, in centimetres, of the wearer for whom they are
- suitable. This differs from the existing practice, in some countries,
- of labeling clothes based on dimensions measured on the article. For
- example, there is a significant difference between the length of a
- foot, and the inside length of the shoe that best fits that foot. In
- fact, the most suitable inside length of a shoe for a given foot can
- vary significantly for different types of shoes. If shoes are labeled
- based on the length of the feet for which they were designed, I will
- only ever have to remember that my feet are 28 cm.
-
- The standard consists of several parts:
-
- EN 13402-1 defines the list of body dimensions that can be used in
- clothes labels, together with an anatomical explanation and
- measurement guidelines. This list includes head, neck, chest, bust,
- underbust, waist, hip and girth, as well as the inside leg, arm, and
- foot length along with height and body bass. It also defines a
- standard pictogram that can be used on language-neutral labels to
- indicate one or several of these body dimensions. [See
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/download/bodydim.pdf for some software
- to draw such pictograms.]
-
- EN 13402-2 defines for each type of garment a "primary dimension"
- according to which it should be labelled (e.g., head girth for a
- bicycle helmet or chest girth for a pyjama). For some types of
- garnment, a single size is not adequate to select the right product,
- so a "secondary dimension" is added (e.g., inside leg length in
- addition to waist girth for trousers).
-
- EN 13402-3 defines, for each type of garnment, preferred numbers of
- primary and secondary body dimensions. Manufacturers and national
- standards bodied can then chose a subset of these. Several large
- anthropometric studies have recently been performed to find the best
- set of dimension ranges and step sizes for this part of the standard.
-
- EN 13402-4 is still under review and describes a compact alphanumeric
- coding system for clothes sizes. It is mostly intended for industry to
- use in databases and as a part of stock-keeping identifiers and
- catalogue ordering numbers. It is expected to be available in late
- 2007.
-
- For a more detailed summery of EN 13402, go to
-
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EN_13402
-
- Two related press releases by the British Standards Institute:
-
- http://www.bsi-global.com/News/Releases/2002/March/n3f02c7044524a.xalter
- http://www.bsi-global.com/News/Releases/2003/October/n3f9953e58c3df.xalter
-
- Professional dress and personal protection equipment has for many
- years been labelled with metric body dimensions, based on ISO
- standards very similar to EN 13402-1. It can be hoped that the
- completion of the remaining parts of EN 13402 will boost the use of
- metric clothes sizes also on the high street. However, like with any
- other successful standard, it will take three to five years from the
- completion of the standard until the new system is widely used in the
- market.
-
- [The British retailer Marks & Spencer has dual-labeled clothes for
- some time in both inches and centimeters. However, the centimetre
- figures used are in some cases simply converted equivalents of the
- traditional inch-based designations. They are not always equivalent to
- the corresponding EN 13402 body dimensions.]
-
-
- 2.5 What inch-based standards are widely used in metric countries?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 2.5.1 Pipe threads:
-
- The ISO 7 and ISO 228 pipe threads used all over the world in domestic
- water and heating systems are based on the British Standard pipe (BSP)
- threads. They use a Whitworth (55┬░) thread with an integral number of
- threads per inch (i.e., the thread pitch divides 25.4 mm evenly). The
- standard specifies today the exact thread parameters in millimetres,
- but the threads are still named after the number of inches of the
- nominal bore (inner) diameter of the pipe, which defines its flow
- capacity. In the current standards, this thread size is just one of 15
- dimensionless numbers, in the range 1/16 to 6. It is no longer treated
- as an inch measure, because no such inch measure appears anywhere on
- the thread profile.
-
- The standards for steel pipes that are suitable for use with ISO 7
- threads (ISO 65, etc.) no longer quote any inch dimensions. The
- British Standard Pipes are defined today by their outer diameter (OD)
- and wall thickness in millimeters. They can also be referred to by
- their "DN designation", which is essentially a crudely downwards
- rounded millimetre figure that approximates the inner diameter
- (historically a round inch figure). Like the thread size, the DN
- designation should only be used as a dimensionless type number and not
- as a millimeter measure, because the actual inner diameter of the
- standard pipes is slightly larger. The preferred way to refer to a
- standard steel pipe today is to specify the actual outer diameter of
- the pipe in millimeters.
-
- Thread size DN designation Outer diameter Wall thickness
- number of pipe of pipe [mm] of pipe [mm]
-
- 1/16
- 1/8 6 10.2 2.0
- 1/4 8 13.5 2.3
- 3/8 10 17.2 2.3
- 1/2 15 21.3 2.6
- 3/4 20 26.9 2.6
- 1 25 33.7 3.2
- 1 1/4 32 42.4 3.2
- 1 1/2 40 48.3 3.2
- 2 50 60.3 3.6
- 2 1/2 65 76.1 3.6
- 3 80 88.9 4.0
- 4 100 114.3 4.5
- 5 125 139.7 5.0
- 6 150 165.1 5.0
-
-
- 2.5.2 Metric bicycle tire and rim designations:
-
- Many of the bicycle tires and rims used all over the world are based
- on older British inch-based standards. However, their dimensions are
- defined and labelled today in millimetres according to the
- international standard format defined in ISO 5775.
-
- For example, a normal "wired edge" tire (for straight-side and
- crotchet-type rims) with a "nominal section width" of 32 mm, a
- "nominal rim diameter" of 597 mm, and a "recommended inflation
- pressure" of 400 kPa is marked according to ISO 5775-1 as:
-
- 32-597 inflate to 400 kPa
-
- The first number (nominal section width) is essentially the width of
- the inflated tire (minus any tread) in millimetres. The inner width of
- the rim on which the tire is mounted should be about 65% of the tire's
- nominal section width for tires smaller than 30 mm and 55% for those
- larger. The second number (nominal rim diameter) is essentially the
- inner diameter of the tire in millimetres when it is mounted on the
- rim. The corresponding circumference can be measured with a suitably
- narrow tape inside the rim.
-
- The minimum inflation pressure recommended for a "wired edge" tire is
- 300 kPa for narrow tires (25 mm section width or less), 200 kPa for
- other sizes in normal highway service, and 150 kPa for off-the-road
- service.
-
- More information:
-
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-5775.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_5775
-
- 2.5.3 Shotgun gauge sizes
-
- Shotgun barrel diameters are in many countries still named using a
- historic "gauge" scale. An n-gauge diameter means that n balls of
- lead (density 11.352 g/cm┬│) with that diameter weigh one pound
- (453.5924 g). Therefore an n-gauge shotgun has a barrel diameter
-
- d = [6 × 453.59237 g / (11.352 g/cm³ × n × π)] ^ 1/3
- = 42.416 mm / (n ^ 1/3)
-
-
- 2.6 What metric standards are commonly known under an inch name?
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- - The so-called "3.5 inch floppy disk" (ISO 9529) is in fact a fully
- metric design, originally developed by Sony in Japan. It was first
- introduced on the market as the "90 mm floppy disk", and it is
- exactly 90 mm wide, 94 mm long, and 3.3 mm thick. The disk inside
- has a diameter of 85.8 mm. Not a single dimension of this disk
- design is 3.5 in (88.9 mm).
-
- [The older 5 1/4 and 8 inch floppies, on the other hand, are
- inch-based designs by IBM.]
-
- - The standard silicon wafers known in the US as 6, 8, or 12 inch
- wafers are actually 150 mm, 200 mm and 300 mm in diameter (SEMI
- M1-1103).
-
- - People unfamiliar with the ISO 3 preferred number system sometimes
- suspect wrongly that a -- to them -- unusual looking measured
- millimetre dimension is actually an inch dimension, whereas the
- designer chose in fact a metric length from a Renard series:
-
- Renard dimension popular inch dimension
-
- 25 mm (R5) 1 inch = 25.4 mm
- 12 mm (R5) 1/2 inch = 12.7 mm
- 6.3 mm (R5) 1/4 inch = 6.35 mm
- 3.15 mm (R10) 1/8 inch = 3.175 mm
-
-
- 3 Misc
- =======
-
-
- 3.1 Why is there a newsgroup on the metric system?
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- The USENET newsgroup was created in December 2003 after a ballot for
- its creation had passed on 25 November 2003 with 211 yes votes against
- 25 no votes. The charter of this worldwide unmoderated electronic
- discussion forum sums up its scope:
-
- This newsgroup is for discussion about the International System of
- Units (SI) or metric system, including its use in scientific,
- technical, and consumer applications, its history and definition, and
- its adoption in fields and regions where other units of measurement
- are still prevalent (metrication). Included within its scope are
- related global standards and conventions, for example metric product
- specifications and consumer-product labelling practice.
-
- The proposal to create the group noted:
-
- Units of measurement and related standards affect many aspects of our
- daily lives. The global standardization of a single consistent
- International System of Units was a major breakthrough for human
- civilization and significantly simplified communication, learning,
- work and trade all over the planet.
-
- The introduction of the metric system still faces delays in some
- areas. Notable examples are consumer communication and traffic
- regulations in the United States and United Kingdom, as well as parts
- of the aeronautical and typographic industry. It is therefore no
- surprise that discussions about the metric system flare up regularly
- in many different newsgroups. In particular the slow progress with
- metrication in the United States promises to fuel such debates for
- many years to come.
-
- A dedicated newsgroup will focus expertise and will provide a medium
- for professionals and hobbyists to find advice and suggestions on
- metric product standards and conventions.
-
-
- 3.2 Where can I look up unit conversion factors?
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- The popular Web search service http://www.google.com/ has a powerful
- built-in calculator function and knows a comprehensive set of unit
- conversions.
-
- Usage examples:
-
- 4 inches
- => 10.16 centimetres
-
- c in furlongs per fortnight
- => the speed of light = 1.8026175 × 10^12 furlongs per fortnight
-
- Another unit converter website:
-
- http://www.convertit.com/Go/ConvertIt/Measurement/Converter.ASP
-
- There is various unit-conversion software available, such as:
-
- http://www.gnu.org/software/units/
-
- A very comprehensive list of conversion factors for units used in the
- United States can be found in
-
- Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI)
- NIST Special Publication 811, 1995 Edition, by Barry N. Taylor.
- Appendix B: Conversion Factors
- http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/
-
-
- 3.3 What is the exact international definition of some non-SI units?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- unit name symbol exact definition
-
- inch in 1 in = 25.4 mm
- foot ft 1 ft = 12 in = 0.3048 m
- yard yd 1 yd = 3 ft = 0.9144 m
- mile 1 mile = 5280 ft = 1609.344 m
- nautical mile 1 nautical mile = 1852 m
- knot 1 knot = 1.852 km/h
-
- are a 1 a = 100 m┬▓ = 10 m x 10 m
- hectare ha 1 ha = 10000 m┬▓ = 100 m x 100 m
-
- pint (GB) pt (GB) 1 pt (GB) = 0.56826125 L
- gallon (US) gal (US) 1 gal (US) = 231 in┬│ = 3.785411784 L
-
- pound lb 1 lb = 0.45359237 kg
- kilogram force kgf 1 kgf = 9.80665 N
- kilopond kp 1 kp = 1 kgf
-
- bar bar 1 bar = 100 kPa
- standard atmosphere atm 1 atm = 101.325 kPa
- torr Torr 1 Torr = 1/760 atm
- technical atmosphere at 1 at = 1 kgf/cm┬▓ = 98.0665 kPa
- millimetre of water mmHΓééO 1 mmHΓééO = 10^-4 at = 9.80665 Pa
-
- rad rad 1 rad = 0.01 Gy
- rem rem 1 rem = 0.01 Sv
- curie Ci 1 Ci = 3.7 × 10^10 Bq
- röntgen R 1 R = 2.58 × 10^-4 C/kg
-
- Use of all these non-SI units is deprecated, except for use in fields
- where they are still required by law or contract.
-
- [All values and definitions taken from ISO 31:1992 and ISO 1000:1992.]
-
-
- 3.4 What are calories?
- -----------------------
-
- One calorie (cal) is the amount of heat required to warm 1 g of
- air-free water from 14.5 ┬░C to 15.5 ┬░C at a constant pressure of 1
- atm. It is defined as 1 cal = 4.1855 J, but this value has an
- uncertainty of 0.5 mJ. There is also an "International Table calorie"
- with 1 cal = 4.1868 J, as well as a "thermochemical calorie" with 1
- cal = 4.184 J.
-
- In the United States, the kilocalorie (kcal) is often abbreviated as
- "Cal".
-
- The kilocalorie is still widely used all over the world to measure the
- nutritional energy of food products (usually per 100 g). Perhaps it is
- the fact that the term "calories" has become a common synonym for
- "nutritional energy" that makes it somewhat difficult for the SI unit
- for energy, the joule, to become popular in this area.
-
- ("Low-calorie food" may be easier to sell than "low-energy food".)
-
-
- 3.5 What are FFUs and WOMBAT units?
- ------------------------------------
-
- The collection of units used in the United States lacks a defining
- formal name. The term "imperial units" does not quite fit, because
- although many of the US units are derived from those of the British
- Empire, they are not all identical. Most notably, 1 US pint = 473.1765
- mL, whereas 1 Imperial pint = 568.2615 mL. The term "US customary
- units" seems to be preferred in government documents.
-
- Two alternative and somewhat less diplomatic names for these units
- emerged on the US Metric Association mailing list:
-
- - Flintstone Units or Fred Flintstone Units (FFUs)
-
- - Way Of Measuring Badly in America Today (WOMBAT)
- (also: Waste Of Money, Brains And Time)
-
-
- 3.6 Does kilo mean 1024 in computing?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Powers of two occur naturally as design dimensions in computer
- hardware, in particular for the size of address spaces. It has
- therefore become customary in some areas (most notably memory chips)
- to use the SI prefixes kilo, mega and giga as if they stood for the
- factors 2^10, 2^20 and 2^30 instead of 10^3, 10^6, and 10^9,
- respectively. For example, a RAM chip with 65536 bits capacity is
- commonly referred to as a "64-kbit-chip".
-
- While such use may be acceptable when it occurs in the names of
- product classes (e.g., a "megabit chip" is the smallest chip model
- that can contain one million bits), it must not be extended into
- formal language, such as parameter tables in product datasheets or
- messages generated by software.
-
- The BIPM has clarified that the SI prefixes must unambiguously stand
- for the exact powers of ten.
-
- Even in the field of computer design, the prefixes kilo, mega and giga
- are very commonly used to refer to powers of ten. For example a 64
- kbit communication line transmits exactly 64 000 bits per second and a
- 200 MHz processor operates with exactly 200 000 000 clock cycles per
- second. Bizarre mixtures between binary and decimal interpretations of
- the SI prefixes have been spotted in the wild as well. For example,
- the 90 mm floppy disk that is sometimes labelled with a capacity of
- "1.44 megabytes" has a formatted capacity of 512 × 80 × 18 × 2 = 1.44
- × 1000 × 1024 bytes.
-
- In order to help eliminate such abuse of SI prefixes, the
- International Electrotechnical Commission in 1999 amended the standard
- IEC 27-2 (Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology, Part 2:
- Telecommunications and electronics). It now defines new unit prefixes
- for powers of two:
-
- 1024 = 2^10 = 1 024 kibi Ki
- 1024^2 = 2^20 = 1 048 576 mebi Mi
- 1024^3 = 2^30 = 1 073 741 824 gibi Gi
- 1024^4 = 2^40 = 1 099 511 627 776 tebi Ti
- 1024^5 = 2^50 = 1 125 899 906 842 624 pebi Pi
- 1024^6 = 2^60 = 1 152 921 504 606 846 976 exbi Ei
-
- This way, the 90 mm floppy disk has now unambiguously a capacity of
- 1400 kibibytes (KiB). The standard crystal-oscillator frequency in
- wrist watches is 32768 Hz = 32 KiHz.
-
- Note that the symbol for kibi (Ki) starts with an uppercase letter, in
- contrast to the symbol for kilo (k).
-
- These new binary prefixes were recently equally defined in IEEE Std
- 1541-2002 (IEEE trial-use standard for prefixes for binary multiples).
-
- More information:
-
- http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
- http://www.cofc.edu/~frysingj/binprefixes.html
-
-
- 3.7 What are the official short symbols for bit and byte?
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
- The SI currently does not cover units for information. The conventions
- in this field are still somewhat less well defined than they are for
- SI units. There are some other standards, such as IEC 27, that define
- various computer, telecommunication and psychophysics units that can
- be used with the SI. These include bit (bit), byte (B), neper (Np),
- shannon (Sh), bel (B), octave, phon, sone, baud (Bd), erlang (E), and
- hartley (Hart).
-
- Note: The abbreviation B for byte is slightly problematic for two
- reasons. Firstly, the B is also the symbol for the unit bel (used for
- the decimal logarithm of the quotient between two power values), but
- as the latter is in practice mostly used with the prefix deci (decibel
- = dB), there is little chance of confusion. Secondly, it breaks the
- tradition of using an uppercase letter only if the unit was named
- after a person.
-
- In French, the unit octet (o) is commonly used instead of byte. In
- English, "octet" is commonly used at least in telecommunication
- specifications, to unambiguously refer to a group of eight bits.
-
- [IEEE Std 260.1-2004 defines the units and symbols bit (b) and byte
- (B). In practice, the lowercase b as a symbol for bit seems less
- frequently used since "bit" itself is already an abbreviation (for
- "binary digit").]
-
-
- 3.8 What does the "e" symbol found on many packaged goods mean?
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Prepackaged supermarket goods bought in Europe show, next to the
- weight or volume indication, a symbol that looks like a slightly large
- and bold lowercase letter "e". With this symbol, the manufacturer
- guarantees that the tolerance of the indicated weight or volume meets
- the requirements of European Union legislation, namely:
-
- Council Directive 75/106/EEC on the approximation of the laws of the
- Member States relating to the making-up by volume of certain
- prepackaged liquids, 1974-12-19, (Official Journal L 324, 1975-12-16).
- http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/en/consleg/pdf/1975/en_1975L0106_do_001.pdf
-
- Council Directive 76/211/EEC on the approximation of the laws of the
- Member States relating to the making-up by weight or by volume
- of certain prepackaged products, 1976-01-20, (Official Journal L 046,
- 1976-02-21, p. 1)
- http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/en/consleg/pdf/1976/en_1976L0211_do_001.pdf
-
- These EU regulations define the maximally allowed negative error of
- the packaged content in relation to the label, as well as statistical
- tests that manufactured packages must be able to pass.
-
- The exact shape of the "e" is defined, along with various other far
- less frequently used symbols, in:
-
- Council Directive 71/316/EEC on the approximation of the laws of the
- Member States relating to common provisions for both measuring
- instruments and methods of metrological control, 1971-07-26,
- (Official Journal L 202, 1971-09-06, p. 1).
- http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/en/consleg/pdf/1971/en_1971L0316_do_001.pdf
-
- The Unicode and ISO 10646 character-set standards call this "e" the
- ESTIMATED SYMBOL and encode it at position U+212E.
-
-
- 3.9 How are metric units used in the kitchen?
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- In metric countries, cook-book recipes traditionally list
-
- - liquid ingredients by volume (mL)
-
- - solid and powder ingredients by weight (g)
-
- In addition, small amounts (< 50 mL) of both liquid and powder
- ingredients are measured in "tea spoons", "table spoons", or
- "pinches". Ingredients sold as items are simply listed by number or
- fraction (e.g., 3 eggs, 1/2 medium-sized apple).
-
- Practically every well-equipped kitchen in metric countries features:
-
- - a measuring cup, suitable for measuring volumes of 50-500 mL
-
- - a scale, suitable for measuring weights of 20-2000 g
-
- While integer multiples of subunits (125 mL milk, 250 g flour) are
- more common, fractions of larger units (1/8 L milk, 1/4 kg flour) are
- frequently encountered in metric recipes, entirely depending on the
- author's personal preference. Some regions and disciplines have
- evolved their own metric conventions. In Austrian or Polish kitchens,
- for example, the decagram is commonly heard of. Bar tenders in many
- countries use centilitres (cL) or decilitres (dL) and have measuring
- spoons for these.
-
- The metric practice of measuring powders by weight differs from the US
- tradition of listing powders by volume (usually in "cups"). Weight
- measures ensure somewhat more reproducible results, because the
- density of fine powders (e.g., flour, powder sugar) can vary by as
- much as 20%, depending on whether the powder was sifted, spooned or
- dipped into the measuring cup, and on how heigh the resulting heap
- became.
-
-
- 3.10 How to convert US customary recipes into metric?
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- When converting cooking recipies from US customary units to metric,
- it is often not sufficient to merely convert the units. In the case of
- powder ingredients (> 50 mL), the translator should also refer to the
- typical density of the ingredient, in order to convert from volume to
- weight.
-
- Some example densities:
-
- wheat flour: 0.5 - 0.6 g/mL (depending on it being sifted, spooned,
- powdered sugar: 0.4 - 0.5 g/mL or dipped, as well as amount in heap)
- granulated sugar: 0.83 g/mL
- baking powder: 0.75 - 0.9 g/mL (depending on composition)
- table salt: 1.2 g/mL
-
- More detailed tables are available from:
-
- - USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference,
- National Agricultural Library, United States Department
- of Agriculture.
- http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/
-
- - L. Fulton, E. Matthews, C. Davis: Average weight of a measured
- cup of various foods. Home Economics Research Report No. 41,
- Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of
- Agriculture, Washington, DC, 1977.
-
- Some commonly used US kitchen measures are now defined by US law
- (21CFR101.9(b)(5)(viii)) in terms of round metric volumes:
-
- 1 tea spoon = 5 mL
- 1 table spoon = 15 mL
- 1 fl oz = 30 mL
- 1 cup = 240 mL
-
- http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/cfr_2004/aprqtr/21cfr101.9.htm
-
- See also:
-
- Guidelines for determining metric equivalents of household measures,
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Food Safety and
- Applied Nutrition Office of Food Labeling, October, 1993.
- http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/flmetric.html
-
-
- Thanks to the many readers of misc.metric-system who provided
- suggestions to improve this text.
-
- --
- Markus Kuhn, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
- http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ || CB3 0FD, Great Britain
-