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                CONDENSED GUIDE TO SI UNITS AND STANDARDS
                             By Drew Daniels
   The following is a highly condensed guide to SI units, standard usage and 

numerical notation for the benefit of people who have occasion to write specifications or technical literature of any kind.

   The abominable disregard for (literary and verbal) communication 

standards even among engineers and highly skilled technicians makes for needless confusion, ambiguity and duplication of effort.

   Let's review the world standard means and methods for expressing the 

terms we use and use them to codify our jargon and simplify our communications.

SI UNITS, STANDARDS AND NOTATION

   
   All the way back in 1866, the  Metric System  of units was legalized by 

the U.S. Government for trade in the United States.

   In 1960 the international "General Conference on Weights and Measures" 

met in Paris and named the metric system of units (based on the meter, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin and candela) the "International System of Units". The Conference also established the abbreviation "SI" as the official abbreviation, to be used in all languages.

   The SI units are used to derive units of measurement for all physical 

quantities and phenomena. There are only seven basic SI "base units", these are:

NAME SYMBOL QUANTITY


ampere A electric current candela cd luminous intensity meter m length kelvin K thermodynamic temperature kilogram kg mass mole mol amount of substance second s time

The SI derived units and supplementary units are listed here with applicable derivative equations:

NAME SYMBOL QUANTITY DERIVED BY


coulomb C quantity of electricity A*s farad F capacitance A*s/V henry H inductance V*s/A hertz Hz frequency s^- joule J energy or work N*m lumen lm luminous flux cd*sr lux lx illuminance lm/m^2 newton N force kg*m/s^2 ohm (upper case omega) electric resistance V/A pascal Pa pressure N/m^2 radian rad plane angle steradian sr solid angle tesla T magnetic flux density Wb/m^2 volt V potential difference W/A watt W power J/s weber Wb magnetic flux V*s

  NAME                        SYMBOL         QUANTITY

——————————————————————– ampere per meter A/m magnetic field strength candela per square meter cd/m^2 luminance joule per kelvin J/K entropy joule per kilogram kelvin J/(kg*K) specific heat capacity kilogram per cubic meter kg/m^3 mass density (density) meter per second m/s speed, velocity meter per second per second m/s^2 acceleration square meter m^2 area cubic meter m^3 volume square meter per second m^2/s kinematic viscosity newton-second per square meter N*s/m^2 dynamic viscosity 1 per second s^- radioactivity radian per second rad/s angular velocity radian per second per second rad/s^2 angular acceleration volt per meter V/m electric field strength watt per meter kelvin W/(m*K) thermal conductivity watt per steradian W/sr radiant intensity

DEFINITIONS OF SI UNITS

(The wording used by the Conference may seem a bit stilted, but it is carefully chosen for semantic clarity to make the definitions unambiguous.)

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 meter apart in vacuum, would produce between these conductors a force equal to 2E-7 newton per meter of length.

The candela is the luminous intensity, in the perpendicular direction, of a surface of 1/600,000 square meter of a blackbody at the temperature of freezing platinum under a pressure of 101,325 newtons per square meter.

The coulomb is the quantity of electricity transported in 1 second by the current of 1 ampere.

The farad is the capacitance of a capacitor between the plates of which there appears a difference of potential of 1 volt when it is charged by a quantity of electricity equal to 1 coulomb.

The henry is the inductance of a closed circuit in which an electromotive force of 1 volt is produced when the electric current in the circuit varies uniformly at a rate of 1 ampere per second.

The joule is the work done when the point of application of 1 newton is displaced a distance of 1 meter in the direction of the force.

The kelvin , the unit of thermodynamic temperature, is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.

The kilogram is the unit of mass; it is equal to the mass of the international prototype of the kilogram. (The international prototype of the kilogram is a particular cylinder of platinum-irridium alloy which is preserved in a vault at Sevres, France, by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.)

The lumen is the luminous flux emitted in a solid angle of 1 steradian by a uniform point source having an intensity of 1 candela.

The meter is the length equal to 1,650,763.73 wavelengths in vacuum of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the levels 2p sub 10, and 5d sub 5 of the krypton-86 atom.

The mole is the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities as there are carbon atoms in 12 grams of carbon 12. The elementary entities must be specified and may be atoms, molecules, ions, electrons, other particles or specified groups of such particles.

The newton is that force which gives to a mass of 1 kilogram an acceleration of 1 meter per second per second.

The ohm is the electric resistance between two points of a conductor when a constant difference of potential of 1 volt, applied between these two points, produces in this conductor a current of 1 ampere, this conductor not being the source of any electromotive force.

The radian is the plane angle between two radii of a circle which cut off on the circumference an arc equal in length to the radius.

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 cesium-133 atom.

The steradian is the solid angle which, having its vertex in the center of a sphere, cuts off an area of the surface of the sphere equal to that of a square with sides of length equal to the radius of the sphere.

The volt is the difference of electric potential between two points of a conducting wire carrying a constant current of 1 ampere, when the power dissipated between these points is equal to 1 watt.

The watt is the power which gives rise to the production of energy at the rate of 1 joule per second.

The weber is the magnetic flux which, linking a circuit of one turn, produces in it an electromotive force of 1 volt as it is reduced to zero at a uniform rate in 1 second.

SI PREFIXES

   The names of multiples and submultiples of any SI unit are formed by 

application of the prefixes:

MULTIPLIER PREFIX SYMBOL TIMES 1, IS EQUAL TO: ———- —— —— ————————– 10^18 exa E 1 000 000 000 000 000 000 10^15 peta P 1 000 000 000 000 000 10^12 tera T 1 000 000 000 000 10^9 giga G 1 000 000 000 10^6 mega M 1 000 000 10^3 kilo k 1 000 10^2 hecto h 100 10 deka da 10 0 – – 1 (unity) 10^-1 deci d .1 10^-2 centi c .01 10^-3 milli m .001 10^-6 micro u .000 001 10^-9 nano n .000 000 001 10^-12 pico p .000 000 000 001 10^-15 femto f .000 000 000 000 001 10^-18 atto a .000 000 000 000 000 001

   Some examples:  ten-thousand grams is written; 10 kg,  20,000 cycles per 

second is written; 20 kHz, 10-million hertz is written; 10 MHz, and 250 billionths of a weber per meter of magnetic flux is written; 250 nWb/m. Always use less than 1000 units with an SI prefix; "1000 MGS" is advertizing hyperbole and should be written " 1 g " only.

   SI prefixes and units should be written together and then set off by a 

space (single space in print) from their numerators. For example; use the form " 35 mm " instead of " 35mm " and " 1 kHz " instead of " 1k Hz ".

   When writing use standard SI formats and be consistent.  You should 

consult National Bureau of Standards publication 330, (1977) for details on usage.

   Never combine SI prefixes directly, that is, write 10^-10 farads as 100 

pF instead of 0.1 micro-microfarads (uuF). Keep in mind that whenever you write out a unit name longhand, the rule is that the name is all lower case, but when abbreviating, the first letter is upper case if the unit is named after a person and lower case if it is not; examples: V = volt for Volta, F = farad for Faraday, T = tesla for Tesla, and so on. Letter m = meter, s = second, rad = radian, and so on. Revolutions per minute may be written only as r/min, miles per hour may be written only as mi./hr, and inches per second may be written only as in./s and so on.

                  
   In addition to the correct upper and lower case, prefixes and 

combinations, there is also a conventional text spacing for SI units and abbreviations. Write 20 Hz, rather than 20Hz. Write 20 kHz, rather than 20k Hz, and so on. Always separate the numerator of a unit from its prefix and/or unit name, but do not separate the prefix and name.

SCIENTIFIC AND ENGINEERING NOTATION (NOTE: "E" stands for power of 10 exponent.)

   Scientific notation is used to make big and small numbers easy to handle.

Engineering notation is similar to scientific notation except that it uses thousands exclusively, rather than tens like scientific notation.

   The number 100  could be written 1E2 (1*10^2) or 10^2  in scientific 

notation, but would be written only as 100 in engineering notation. The number 12,000 would be written 1.2E4 (1.2*10^4) in scientific, and written 12E3 (12*10^3) in engineering notation. Here is a partial listing of possible Scientific and Engineering notation prefixes:

SCIENTIFIC ENGINEERING SCIENTIFIC ENGINEERING ———- ———– ———- ———– 10^-18 = 1 a 10^1 = 10 10^-17 = 10 a 10^2 = 100 10^-16 = 100 a 10^3 = 1 k 10^-15 = 1 f 10^4 = 10 k 10^-14 = 10 f 10^5 = 100 k 10^-13 = 100 f 10^6 = 1 M 10^-12 = 1 p 10^7 = 10 M 10^-11 = 10 p 10^8 = 100 M 10^-10 = 100 p 10^9 = 1 G 10^-9 = 1 n 10^10 = 10 G 10^-8 = 10 n 10^11 = 100 G 10^-7 = 100 n 10^12 = 1 T 10^-6 = 1 u 10^13 = 10 T 10^-5 = 10 u 10^14 = 100 T 10^-4 = 100 u 10^15 = 1 P 10^-3 = 1 m 10^16 = 10 P 10^-2 = 10 m 10^17 = 100 P 10^-1 = 100 m 10^18 = 1 E 10^0 = 1 10^19 = 10 E

                                        10^20      =      100 E
   Engineering notation is used by default when we speak because the 

numerical values of the spoken names of SI prefixes run in increments of thousands such as; kilohertz, microfarads, millihenrys and megaohms (pronounced "megohms"). The spoken term "20 kilohertz" is already in engineering notation, and would be written on paper as 20E3 (20*10^3) hertz in strict engineering notation and as 2E4 (2*10^4) in scientific notation if it were not written in the more familiar form, 20 kHz.

   In either case, scientific or engineering, the rule is: for numbers 

greater than 1, the En part of the figure indicates the number of decimal places to the right that zeros will be added to the original number. For numbers smaller than 1, the E-n part of the figure indicates the number of decimal places to the left of the original number that the decimal point itself should be moved. The small "n" and "-n" here stand for the digits in the exponent itself.

   A definitive phamphlet describing SI units, conversions between SI units,

older CGS and MKS units and units outside the SI system of units is available in the form of NASA Publication SP-7012, (1973). Inquire to the U.S. Government Printing Office in Pueblo, Colorado or in Washington, D.C. for this and other publications about SI units, their use and history.

END

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