The metric system is a system of measurement that standardizes a set of base units and a nomenclature for describing relatively large and small quantities via decimal-based multiplicative unit prefixes. Though the rules governing the metric system have changed over time, the modern definition, the International System of Units (SI), defines the metric prefixes and seven base units: metre (m), kilogram (kg), second (s), ampere (A), kelvin (K), mole (mol), and candela (cd).
An SI derived unit is a named combination of base units such as hertz (cycles per second), newton (kg⋅m/s2), and tesla (1 kg⋅s−2⋅A−1) and in the case of Celsius a shifted scale from Kelvin. Certain units have been officially accepted for use with the SI. Some of these are decimalised, like the litre and electronvolt, and are considered "metric". Others, like the astronomical unit are not. Ancient non-metric but SI-accepted multiples of time, minute and hour, are base 60 (sexagesimal). Similarly, the angular measure degree and submultiples, arcminute, and arcsecond, are also sexagesimal and SI-accepted.
The SI system derives from the older metre, kilogram, second (MKS) system of units, though the definition of the base units has evolved over time. Today, all base units are defined by physical constants; not by example as physical objects as they were in the past.
Other metric system variants include the centimetre–gram–second system of units, the metre–tonne–second system of units, and the gravitational metric system. Each has unaffiliated metric units. Some of these systems are still used in limited contexts.
Adoption
The SI system has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by most countries in the world.
A notable outlier is the United States (US). Although used in some contexts, the US has resisted full adoption; continuing to use "a conglomeration of basically incoherent measurement systems".
Adopting the metric system is known as metrication.
Multiplicative prefixes
In the SI system and generally in older metric systems, multiples and fractions of a unit can be described via a prefix on a unit name that implies a decimal (base-10), multiplicative factor. The only exceptions are for the SI-accepted units of time (minute and hour) and angle (degree, arcminute, arcsecond) which, based on ancient convention, use base-60 multipliers.
Prefix | Symbol | Factor | Power |
---|---|---|---|
tera | T | 1000000000000 | 1012 |
giga | G | 1000000000 | 109 |
mega | M | 1000000 | 106 |
kilo | k | 1000 | 103 |
hecto | h | 100 | 102 |
deca | da | 10 | 101 |
(none) | (none) | 1 | 100 |
deci | d | 0.1 | 10−1 |
centi | c | 0.01 | 10−2 |
milli | m | 0.001 | 10−3 |
micro | μ | 0.000001 | 10−6 |
nano | n | 0.000000001 | 10−9 |
pico | p | 0.000000000001 | 10−12 |
The prefix kilo, for example, implies a factor of 1000 (103), and the prefix milli implies a factor of 1/1000 (10−3). Thus, a kilometre is a thousand metres, and a milligram is one thousandth of a gram. These relations can be written symbolically as:
Base units
The decimalised system is based on the metre, which had been introduced in France in the 1790s. The historical development of these systems culminated in the definition of the International System of Units (SI) in the mid-20th century, under the oversight of an international standards body.
The historical evolution of metric systems has resulted in the recognition of several principles. A set of independent dimensions of nature is selected, in terms of which all natural quantities can be expressed, called base quantities. For each of these dimensions, a representative quantity is defined as a base unit of measure. The definition of base units has increasingly been realised in terms of fundamental natural phenomena, in preference to copies of physical artefacts. A unit derived from the base units is used for expressing quantities of dimensions that can be derived from the base dimensions of the system—e.g., the square metre is the derived unit for area, which is derived from length. These derived units are coherent, which means that they involve only products of powers of the base units, without any further factors. For any given quantity whose unit has a name and symbol, an extended set of smaller and larger units is defined that are related by factors of powers of ten. The unit of time should be the second; the unit of length should be either the metre or a decimal multiple of it; and the unit of mass should be the gram or a decimal multiple of it.
Metric systems have evolved since the 1790s, as science and technology have evolved, in providing a single universal measuring system. Before and in addition to the SI, other metric systems include: the MKS system of units and the MKSA systems, which are the direct forerunners of the SI; the centimetre–gram–second (CGS) system and its subtypes, the CGS electrostatic (cgs-esu) system, the CGS electromagnetic (cgs-emu) system, and their still-popular blend, the Gaussian system; the metre–tonne–second (MTS) system; and the gravitational metric systems, which can be based on either the metre or the centimetre, and either the gram, gram-force, kilogram or kilogram-force.
Attributes
Ease of learning and use
The metric system is intended to be easy to use and widely applicable, including units based on the natural world, decimal ratios, prefixes for multiples and sub-multiples, and a structure of base and derived units.
It is a coherent system with derived units built from base units using logical rather than empirical relationships and with multiples and submultiples of both units based on decimal factors and identified by a common set of prefixes.: 15–18
Extensibility
The metric system is extensible since the governing body reviews, modifies and extends it needs arise. For example, the katal, a derived unit for catalytic activity equivalent to one mole per second (1 mol/s), was added in 1999.
Realisation
The base units used in a measurement system must be realisable. To that end, the definition of each SI base unit is accompanied by a mise en pratique (practical realisation) that describes at least one way that the unit can be measured. Where possible, definitions of the base units were developed so that any laboratory equipped with proper instruments would be able to realise a standard without reliance on an artefact held by another country. In practice, such realisation is done under the auspices of a mutual acceptance arrangement.
In 1791 the commission originally defined the metre based on the size of the earth, equal to one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. In the SI, the standard metre is now defined as exactly 1⁄299792458 of the distance that light travels in a second. The metre can be realised by measuring the length that a light wave travels in a given time, or equivalently by measuring the wavelength of light of a known frequency.
The kilogram was originally defined as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at 4 °C, standardised as the mass of a man-made artefact of platinum–iridium held in a laboratory in France, which was used until a new definition was introduced in May 2019. Replicas made in 1879 at the time of the artefact's fabrication and distributed to signatories of the Metre Convention serve as de facto standards of mass in those countries. Additional replicas have been fabricated since as additional countries have joined the convention. The replicas were subject to periodic validation by comparison to the original, called the IPK. It became apparent that either the IPK or the replicas or both were deteriorating, and are no longer comparable: they had diverged by 50 μg since fabrication, so figuratively, the accuracy of the kilogram was no better than 5 parts in a hundred million or a relative accuracy of 5×10−8. The revision of the SI replaced the IPK with an exact definition of the Planck constant as expressed in SI units, which defines the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants.
Base and derived unit structure
A base quantity is one of a conventionally chosen subset of physical quantities, where no quantity in the subset can be expressed in terms of the others. A base unit is a unit adopted for expressing a base quantity. A derived unit is used for expressing any other quantity, and is a product of powers of base units. For example, in the modern metric system, length has the unit metre and time has the unit second, and speed has the derived unit metre per second.: 15 Density, or mass per unit volume, has the unit kilogram per cubic metre.: 434
Decimal ratios
A significant characteristic of the metric system is its use of decimal multiples – powers of 10. For example, a length that is significantly longer or shorter than 1 metre can be represented in units that are a power of 10 or 1000 metres. This differs from many older systems in which the ratio of different units varied. For example, 12 inches is one foot, but the larger unit in the same system, the mile is not a power of 12 feet. It is 5,280 feet – which is hard to remember for many.: 17
In the early days, multipliers that were positive powers of ten were given Greek-derived prefixes such as kilo- and mega-, and those that were negative powers of ten were given Latin-derived prefixes such as centi- and milli-. However, 1935 extensions to the prefix system did not follow this convention: the prefixes nano- and micro-, for example have Greek roots.: 222–223 During the 19th century the prefix myria-, derived from the Greek word μύριοι (mýrioi), was used as a multiplier for 10000.
When applying prefixes to derived units of area and volume that are expressed in terms of units of length squared or cubed, the square and cube operators are applied to the unit of length including the prefix, as illustrated below.
1 mm2 (square millimetre) | = (1 mm)2 | = (0.001 m)2 | = 0.000001 m2 |
1 km2 (square kilometre) | = (1 km)2 | = (1000 m)2 | = 1000000 m2 |
1 mm3 (cubic millimetre) | = (1 mm)3 | = (0.001 m)3 | = 0.000000001 m3 |
1 km3 (cubic kilometre) | = (1 km)3 | = (1000 m)3 | = 1000000000 m3 |
For the most part, the metric prefixes are used uniformly for SI base, derived and accepted units. A notable exception is that for a large measure of seconds, the non-SI units of minute, hour and day are customary instead. Units of duration longer than a day are problematic since both month and year have varying number of days. Sub-second measures are often indicated via submultiple prefixes. For example, millisecond.
Coherence
Each variant of the metric system has a degree of coherence—the derived units are directly related to the base units without the need for intermediate conversion factors. For example, in a coherent system the units of force, energy, and power are chosen so that the equations
force | = | mass | × | acceleration |
energy | = | force | × | distance |
energy | = | power | × | time |
hold without the introduction of unit conversion factors. Once a set of coherent units has been defined, other relationships in physics that use this set of units will automatically be true. Therefore, Einstein's mass–energy equation, E = mc2, does not require extraneous constants when expressed in coherent units.
The CGS system had two units of energy, the erg that was related to mechanics and the calorie that was related to thermal energy; so only one of them (the erg) could bear a coherent relationship to the base units. Coherence was a design aim of SI, which resulted in only one unit of energy being defined – the joule.
Rationalisation
Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism contained a factor of relating to steradians, representative of the fact that electric charges and magnetic fields may be considered to emanate from a point and propagate equally in all directions, i.e. spherically. This factor made equations more awkward than necessary, and so Oliver Heaviside suggested adjusting the system of units to remove it.
Everyday notions
The basic units of the metric system have always represented commonplace quantities or relationships in nature; even with modern refinements of definition and methodology. In cases where laboratory precision may not be required or available, or where approximations are good enough, the commonplace notions may suffice.
Time
The second is readily determined from the Earth's rotation period. Unlike other units, time multiples are not decimal. A second is 1/60 of a minute, which is 1/60 of an hour, which is 1/24 of a day, so a second is 1/86400 of a day.
Length
The length of the equator is close to 40000000 m (more precisely 40075014.2 m). In fact, the dimensions of our planet were used by the French Academy in the original definition of the metre. A dining tabletop is typically about 0.75 metres high. A very tall human is about 2 metres tall.
Mass
A 1-euro coin weighs 7.5 g; a Sacagawea US 1-dollar coin weighs 8.1 g; a UK 50-pence coin weighs 8.0 g.
Temperature
In every day use, Celsius is more commonly used than Kelvin, however a temperature difference of one Kelvin is the same as one degree Celsius and that is defined as 1/100 of the temperature differential between the freezing and boiling points of water at sea level. A temperature in Kelvin is the temperature in Celsius plus about 273. Human body temperature is about 37 °C or 310 K.
Length, mass, volume relationship
The mass of a litre of cold water is 1 kilogram. 1 millilitre of water occupies 1 cubic centimetre and weighs 1 gram.
Candela and Watt relationship
Candela is about the luminous intensity of a moderately bright candle, or 1 candle power. A 60 Watt tungsten-filament incandescent light bulb has a luminous intensity of about 800 lumens which is radiated equally in all directions (i.e. 4π steradians), thus is equal to Iv = 800 lm/4π sr ≈ 64 cd.
Watt, Volt and Ampere relationship
A 60 W incandescent light bulb consumes 0.5 A at 120 V (US mains voltage). A 60 W bulb rated at 230 V (European mains voltage) consumes 0.26 A at this voltage. This is evident from the formula P = I V.
Mole and mass relationship
A mole of a substance has a mass that is its molecular mass expressed in units of grams. The mass of a mole of carbon is 12.0 g, and the mass of a mole of table salt is 58.4 g.
Since all gases have the same volume per mole at a given temperature and pressure far from their points of liquefaction and solidification (see Perfect gas), and air is about 1/5 oxygen (molecular mass 32) and 4/5 nitrogen (molecular mass 28), the density of any near-perfect gas relative to air can be obtained to a good approximation by dividing its molecular mass by 29 (because 4/5 × 28 + 1/5 × 32 = 28.8 ≈ 29). For example, carbon monoxide (molecular mass 28) has almost the same density as air.
History
The French Revolution (1789–99) enabled France to reform its many outdated systems of various local weights and measures. In 1790, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord proposed a new system based on natural units to the French National Assembly, aiming for global adoption. With the United Kingdom not responding to a request to collaborate in the development of the system, the French Academy of Sciences established a commission to implement this new standard alone, and in 1799, the new system was launched in France.: 145–149
A number of different metric systems have been developed, all using the Mètre des Archives and Kilogramme des Archives (or their descendants) as their base units, but differing in the definitions of the various derived units.
Measure | SI/MKS | CGS | MTS |
---|---|---|---|
distance | metre (m) | centimetre (cm) | metre (m) |
mass | kilogram (kg) | gram (g) | tonne (t) |
time | second (s) | second (s) | second (s) |
velocity | m/s | cm/s | m/s |
acceleration | m/s2 | gal (Gal) | m/s2 |
force | newton (N) | dyne (dyn) | sthene (sn) |
pressure | pascal (Pa) | barye (Ba) | pièze (pz) |
energy | joule (J) | erg (erg) | kilojoule (kJ) |
power | watt (W) | erg/s (erg/s) | kilowatt (kW) |
viscosity | Pa⋅s | poise (P) | pz⋅s |
19th century
In 1832, Gauss used the astronomical second as a base unit in defining the gravitation of the Earth, and together with the milligram and millimetre, this became the first system of mechanical units. He showed that the strength of a magnet could also be quantified in terms of these units, by measuring the oscillations of a magnetised needle and finding the quantity of "magnetic fluid" that produces an acceleration of one unit when applied to a unit mass. The centimetre–gram–second system of units (CGS) was the first coherent metric system, having been developed in the 1860s and promoted by Maxwell and Thomson. In 1874, this system was formally promoted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BAAS). The system's characteristics are that density is expressed in g/cm3, force expressed in dynes and mechanical energy in ergs. Thermal energy was defined in calories, one calorie being the energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of water from 15.5 °C to 16.5 °C. The meeting also recognised two sets of units for electrical and magnetic properties – the electrostatic set of units and the electromagnetic set of units.
The CGS units of electricity were cumbersome to work with. This was remedied at the 1893 International Electrical Congress held in Chicago by defining the "international" ampere and ohm using definitions based on the metre, kilogram and second, in the International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units. During the same period in which the CGS system was being extended to include electromagnetism, other systems were developed, distinguished by their choice of coherent base unit, including the Practical System of Electric Units, or QES (quad–eleventhgram–second) system, was being used. Here, the base units are the quad, equal to 107 m (approximately a quadrant of the Earth's circumference), the eleventhgram, equal to 10−11 g, and the second. These were chosen so that the corresponding electrical units of potential difference, current and resistance had a convenient magnitude.: 268 : 17
20th century
In 1901, Giovanni Giorgi showed that by adding an electrical unit as a fourth base unit, the various anomalies in electromagnetic systems could be resolved. The metre–kilogram–second–coulomb (MKSC) and metre–kilogram–second–ampere (MKSA) systems are examples of such systems.
The metre–tonne–second system of units (MTS) was based on the metre, tonne and second – the unit of force was the sthène and the unit of pressure was the pièze. It was invented in France for industrial use and from 1933 to 1955 was used both in France and in the Soviet Union.Gravitational metric systems use the kilogram-force (kilopond) as a base unit of force, with mass measured in a unit known as the hyl, Technische Masseneinheit (TME), mug or metric slug. Although the CGPM passed a resolution in 1901 defining the standard value of acceleration due to gravity to be 980.665 cm/s2, gravitational units are not part of the International System of Units (SI).
Current
The International System of Units is the modern metric system. It is based on the metre–kilogram–second–ampere (MKSA) system of units from early in the 20th century. It also includes numerous coherent derived units for common quantities like power (watt) and irradience (lumen). Electrical units were taken from the International system then in use. Other units like those for energy (joule) were modelled on those from the older CGS system, but scaled to be coherent with MKSA units. Two additional base units – the kelvin, which is equivalent to degree Celsius for change in thermodynamic temperature but set so that 0 K is absolute zero, and the candela, which is roughly equivalent to the international candle unit of illumination – were introduced. Later, another base unit, the mole, a unit of amount of substance equivalent to the Avogadro number number of specified molecules, was added along with several other derived units.
The system was promulgated by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (French: Conférence générale des poids et mesures – CGPM) in 1960. At that time, the metre was redefined in terms of the wavelength of a spectral line of the krypton-86 atom (krypton-86 being a stable isotope of an inert gas that occurs in undetectable or trace amounts naturally), and the standard metre artefact from 1889 was retired.: 16
Today, the International system of units consists of 7 base units and innumerable coherent derived units including 22 with special names. The last new derived unit, the katal for catalytic activity, was added in 1999. All the base units except the second are now defined in terms of exact and invariant constants of physics or mathematics, barring those parts of their definitions which are dependent on the second itself. As a consequence, the speed of light has now become an exactly defined constant, and defines the metre as 1⁄299,792,458 of the distance light travels in a second. The kilogram was defined by a cylinder of platinum-iridium alloy until a new definition in terms of natural physical constants was adopted in 2019. As of 2022, the range of decimal prefixes has been extended to those for 1030 (quetta–) and 10−30 (quecto–).
See also
- Binary prefix – Symbol placed before units of digital information to indicate multiplication by a power of two
- Electrostatic units – Physical system of measurement that uses the centimetre, gram, and second as base units
- History of measurement
- ISO 31 – Superseded standard on quantities and units
- ISO/IEC 80000 – International standard on physical quantities and units of measurement
- List of metric units – Class of units of measurement
- Metrology – Science of measurement and its application
- Non-SI units mentioned in the SI – Unit accepted for use in the International System of Units
- Outline of metrology and measurement – Topical index of English Wikipedia articles about metrology and measurement
- Preferred metric sizes – Metricated industry standards
- Unified Code for Units of Measure – System of codes for unambiguously representing measurement units
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External links
- Learning materials related to Using the Metric System at Wikiversity
The metric system is a system of measurement that standardizes a set of base units and a nomenclature for describing relatively large and small quantities via decimal based multiplicative unit prefixes Though the rules governing the metric system have changed over time the modern definition the International System of Units SI defines the metric prefixes and seven base units metre m kilogram kg second s ampere A kelvin K mole mol and candela cd A kilogram mass and three metric measuring devices a tape measure in centimetres a thermometer in degrees Celsius and a multimeter that measures potential in volts current in amperes and resistance in ohms An SI derived unit is a named combination of base units such as hertz cycles per second newton kg m s2 and tesla 1 kg s 2 A 1 and in the case of Celsius a shifted scale from Kelvin Certain units have been officially accepted for use with the SI Some of these are decimalised like the litre and electronvolt and are considered metric Others like the astronomical unit are not Ancient non metric but SI accepted multiples of time minute and hour are base 60 sexagesimal Similarly the angular measure degree and submultiples arcminute and arcsecond are also sexagesimal and SI accepted The SI system derives from the older metre kilogram second MKS system of units though the definition of the base units has evolved over time Today all base units are defined by physical constants not by example as physical objects as they were in the past Other metric system variants include the centimetre gram second system of units the metre tonne second system of units and the gravitational metric system Each has unaffiliated metric units Some of these systems are still used in limited contexts AdoptionUnits in everyday use by country as of 2019 The SI system has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by most countries in the world A notable outlier is the United States US Although used in some contexts the US has resisted full adoption continuing to use a conglomeration of basically incoherent measurement systems Adopting the metric system is known as metrication Multiplicative prefixesIn the SI system and generally in older metric systems multiples and fractions of a unit can be described via a prefix on a unit name that implies a decimal base 10 multiplicative factor The only exceptions are for the SI accepted units of time minute and hour and angle degree arcminute arcsecond which based on ancient convention use base 60 multipliers Metric prefixes in everyday usevte Prefix Symbol Factor Powertera T 1000 000 000 000 1012giga G 1000 000 000 109mega M 1000 000 106kilo k 1000 103hecto h 100 102deca da 10 101 none none 1 100deci d 0 1 10 1centi c 0 01 10 2milli m 0 001 10 3micro m 0 000001 10 6nano n 0 000000 001 10 9pico p 0 000000 000 001 10 12 The prefix kilo for example implies a factor of 1000 103 and the prefix milli implies a factor of 1 1000 10 3 Thus a kilometre is a thousand metres and a milligram is one thousandth of a gram These relations can be written symbolically as 1 km 1000 m 1 mg 0 001 gBase unitsThe decimalised system is based on the metre which had been introduced in France in the 1790s The historical development of these systems culminated in the definition of the International System of Units SI in the mid 20th century under the oversight of an international standards body The historical evolution of metric systems has resulted in the recognition of several principles A set of independent dimensions of nature is selected in terms of which all natural quantities can be expressed called base quantities For each of these dimensions a representative quantity is defined as a base unit of measure The definition of base units has increasingly been realised in terms of fundamental natural phenomena in preference to copies of physical artefacts A unit derived from the base units is used for expressing quantities of dimensions that can be derived from the base dimensions of the system e g the square metre is the derived unit for area which is derived from length These derived units are coherent which means that they involve only products of powers of the base units without any further factors For any given quantity whose unit has a name and symbol an extended set of smaller and larger units is defined that are related by factors of powers of ten The unit of time should be the second the unit of length should be either the metre or a decimal multiple of it and the unit of mass should be the gram or a decimal multiple of it Metric systems have evolved since the 1790s as science and technology have evolved in providing a single universal measuring system Before and in addition to the SI other metric systems include the MKS system of units and the MKSA systems which are the direct forerunners of the SI the centimetre gram second CGS system and its subtypes the CGS electrostatic cgs esu system the CGS electromagnetic cgs emu system and their still popular blend the Gaussian system the metre tonne second MTS system and the gravitational metric systems which can be based on either the metre or the centimetre and either the gram gram force kilogram or kilogram force AttributesEase of learning and use The metric system is intended to be easy to use and widely applicable including units based on the natural world decimal ratios prefixes for multiples and sub multiples and a structure of base and derived units It is a coherent system with derived units built from base units using logical rather than empirical relationships and with multiples and submultiples of both units based on decimal factors and identified by a common set of prefixes 15 18 Extensibility The metric system is extensible since the governing body reviews modifies and extends it needs arise For example the katal a derived unit for catalytic activity equivalent to one mole per second 1 mol s was added in 1999 Realisation The base units used in a measurement system must be realisable To that end the definition of each SI base unit is accompanied by a mise en pratique practical realisation that describes at least one way that the unit can be measured Where possible definitions of the base units were developed so that any laboratory equipped with proper instruments would be able to realise a standard without reliance on an artefact held by another country In practice such realisation is done under the auspices of a mutual acceptance arrangement The metre was originally defined to be one ten millionth of the distance between the North Pole and the Equator through Paris In 1791 the commission originally defined the metre based on the size of the earth equal to one ten millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole In the SI the standard metre is now defined as exactly 1 299792 458 of the distance that light travels in a second The metre can be realised by measuring the length that a light wave travels in a given time or equivalently by measuring the wavelength of light of a known frequency The kilogram was originally defined as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at 4 C standardised as the mass of a man made artefact of platinum iridium held in a laboratory in France which was used until a new definition was introduced in May 2019 Replicas made in 1879 at the time of the artefact s fabrication and distributed to signatories of the Metre Convention serve as de facto standards of mass in those countries Additional replicas have been fabricated since as additional countries have joined the convention The replicas were subject to periodic validation by comparison to the original called the IPK It became apparent that either the IPK or the replicas or both were deteriorating and are no longer comparable they had diverged by 50 mg since fabrication so figuratively the accuracy of the kilogram was no better than 5 parts in a hundred million or a relative accuracy of 5 10 8 The revision of the SI replaced the IPK with an exact definition of the Planck constant as expressed in SI units which defines the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants Base and derived unit structure A base quantity is one of a conventionally chosen subset of physical quantities where no quantity in the subset can be expressed in terms of the others A base unit is a unit adopted for expressing a base quantity A derived unit is used for expressing any other quantity and is a product of powers of base units For example in the modern metric system length has the unit metre and time has the unit second and speed has the derived unit metre per second 15 Density or mass per unit volume has the unit kilogram per cubic metre 434 Decimal ratios A significant characteristic of the metric system is its use of decimal multiples powers of 10 For example a length that is significantly longer or shorter than 1 metre can be represented in units that are a power of 10 or 1000 metres This differs from many older systems in which the ratio of different units varied For example 12 inches is one foot but the larger unit in the same system the mile is not a power of 12 feet It is 5 280 feet which is hard to remember for many 17 In the early days multipliers that were positive powers of ten were given Greek derived prefixes such as kilo and mega and those that were negative powers of ten were given Latin derived prefixes such as centi and milli However 1935 extensions to the prefix system did not follow this convention the prefixes nano and micro for example have Greek roots 222 223 During the 19th century the prefix myria derived from the Greek word myrioi myrioi was used as a multiplier for 10000 When applying prefixes to derived units of area and volume that are expressed in terms of units of length squared or cubed the square and cube operators are applied to the unit of length including the prefix as illustrated below 1 mm2 square millimetre 1 mm 2 0 001 m 2 0 000001 m21 km2 square kilometre 1 km 2 1000 m 2 1000 000 m21 mm3 cubic millimetre 1 mm 3 0 001 m 3 0 000000 001 m31 km3 cubic kilometre 1 km 3 1000 m 3 1000 000 000 m3 For the most part the metric prefixes are used uniformly for SI base derived and accepted units A notable exception is that for a large measure of seconds the non SI units of minute hour and day are customary instead Units of duration longer than a day are problematic since both month and year have varying number of days Sub second measures are often indicated via submultiple prefixes For example millisecond Coherence James Clerk Maxwell played a major role in developing the concept of a coherent CGS system and in extending the metric system to include electrical units Each variant of the metric system has a degree of coherence the derived units are directly related to the base units without the need for intermediate conversion factors For example in a coherent system the units of force energy and power are chosen so that the equations force mass accelerationenergy force distanceenergy power time hold without the introduction of unit conversion factors Once a set of coherent units has been defined other relationships in physics that use this set of units will automatically be true Therefore Einstein s mass energy equation E mc2 does not require extraneous constants when expressed in coherent units The CGS system had two units of energy the erg that was related to mechanics and the calorie that was related to thermal energy so only one of them the erg could bear a coherent relationship to the base units Coherence was a design aim of SI which resulted in only one unit of energy being defined the joule Rationalisation Maxwell s equations of electromagnetism contained a factor of 1 4p displaystyle 1 4 pi relating to steradians representative of the fact that electric charges and magnetic fields may be considered to emanate from a point and propagate equally in all directions i e spherically This factor made equations more awkward than necessary and so Oliver Heaviside suggested adjusting the system of units to remove it Everyday notionsThe basic units of the metric system have always represented commonplace quantities or relationships in nature even with modern refinements of definition and methodology In cases where laboratory precision may not be required or available or where approximations are good enough the commonplace notions may suffice Time The second is readily determined from the Earth s rotation period Unlike other units time multiples are not decimal A second is 1 60 of a minute which is 1 60 of an hour which is 1 24 of a day so a second is 1 86400 of a day Length The length of the equator is close to 40000 000 m more precisely 40075 014 2 m In fact the dimensions of our planet were used by the French Academy in the original definition of the metre A dining tabletop is typically about 0 75 metres high A very tall human is about 2 metres tall Mass A 1 euro coin weighs 7 5 g a Sacagawea US 1 dollar coin weighs 8 1 g a UK 50 pence coin weighs 8 0 g Temperature In every day use Celsius is more commonly used than Kelvin however a temperature difference of one Kelvin is the same as one degree Celsius and that is defined as 1 100 of the temperature differential between the freezing and boiling points of water at sea level A temperature in Kelvin is the temperature in Celsius plus about 273 Human body temperature is about 37 C or 310 K Length mass volume relationship The mass of a litre of cold water is 1 kilogram 1 millilitre of water occupies 1 cubic centimetre and weighs 1 gram Candela and Watt relationship Candela is about the luminous intensity of a moderately bright candle or 1 candle power A 60 Watt tungsten filament incandescent light bulb has a luminous intensity of about 800 lumens which is radiated equally in all directions i e 4p steradians thus is equal to Iv 800 lm 4p sr 64 cd Watt Volt and Ampere relationship A 60 W incandescent light bulb consumes 0 5 A at 120 V US mains voltage A 60 W bulb rated at 230 V European mains voltage consumes 0 26 A at this voltage This is evident from the formula P I V Mole and mass relationship A mole of a substance has a mass that is its molecular mass expressed in units of grams The mass of a mole of carbon is 12 0 g and the mass of a mole of table salt is 58 4 g Since all gases have the same volume per mole at a given temperature and pressure far from their points of liquefaction and solidification see Perfect gas and air is about 1 5 oxygen molecular mass 32 and 4 5 nitrogen molecular mass 28 the density of any near perfect gas relative to air can be obtained to a good approximation by dividing its molecular mass by 29 because 4 5 28 1 5 32 28 8 29 For example carbon monoxide molecular mass 28 has almost the same density as air HistoryPavillon de Breteuil Saint Cloud France the home of the metric system since 1875 The French Revolution 1789 99 enabled France to reform its many outdated systems of various local weights and measures In 1790 Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Perigord proposed a new system based on natural units to the French National Assembly aiming for global adoption With the United Kingdom not responding to a request to collaborate in the development of the system the French Academy of Sciences established a commission to implement this new standard alone and in 1799 the new system was launched in France 145 149 A number of different metric systems have been developed all using the Metre des Archives and Kilogramme des Archives or their descendants as their base units but differing in the definitions of the various derived units Variants of the metric system Measure SI MKS CGSTooltip Centimetre gram second system of units MTSTooltip Metre tonne second system of unitsdistance metre m centimetre cm metre m mass kilogram kg gram g tonne t time second s second s second s velocity m s cm s m sacceleration m s2 gal Gal m s2force newton N dyne dyn sthene sn pressure pascal Pa barye Ba pieze pz energy joule J erg erg kilojoule kJ power watt W erg s erg s kilowatt kW viscosity Pa s poise P pz s19th century In 1832 Gauss used the astronomical second as a base unit in defining the gravitation of the Earth and together with the milligram and millimetre this became the first system of mechanical units He showed that the strength of a magnet could also be quantified in terms of these units by measuring the oscillations of a magnetised needle and finding the quantity of magnetic fluid that produces an acceleration of one unit when applied to a unit mass The centimetre gram second system of units CGS was the first coherent metric system having been developed in the 1860s and promoted by Maxwell and Thomson In 1874 this system was formally promoted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science BAAS The system s characteristics are that density is expressed in g cm3 force expressed in dynes and mechanical energy in ergs Thermal energy was defined in calories one calorie being the energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of water from 15 5 C to 16 5 C The meeting also recognised two sets of units for electrical and magnetic properties the electrostatic set of units and the electromagnetic set of units The CGS units of electricity were cumbersome to work with This was remedied at the 1893 International Electrical Congress held in Chicago by defining the international ampere and ohm using definitions based on the metre kilogram and second in the International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units During the same period in which the CGS system was being extended to include electromagnetism other systems were developed distinguished by their choice of coherent base unit including the Practical System of Electric Units or QES quad eleventhgram second system was being used Here the base units are the quad equal to 107 m approximately a quadrant of the Earth s circumference the eleventhgram equal to 10 11 g and the second These were chosen so that the corresponding electrical units of potential difference current and resistance had a convenient magnitude 268 17 20th century In 1901 Giovanni Giorgi showed that by adding an electrical unit as a fourth base unit the various anomalies in electromagnetic systems could be resolved The metre kilogram second coulomb MKSC and metre kilogram second ampere MKSA systems are examples of such systems The metre tonne second system of units MTS was based on the metre tonne and second the unit of force was the sthene and the unit of pressure was the pieze It was invented in France for industrial use and from 1933 to 1955 was used both in France and in the Soviet Union Gravitational metric systems use the kilogram force kilopond as a base unit of force with mass measured in a unit known as the hyl Technische Masseneinheit TME mug or metric slug Although the CGPM passed a resolution in 1901 defining the standard value of acceleration due to gravity to be 980 665 cm s2 gravitational units are not part of the International System of Units SI Current The International System of Units is the modern metric system It is based on the metre kilogram second ampere MKSA system of units from early in the 20th century It also includes numerous coherent derived units for common quantities like power watt and irradience lumen Electrical units were taken from the International system then in use Other units like those for energy joule were modelled on those from the older CGS system but scaled to be coherent with MKSA units Two additional base units the kelvin which is equivalent to degree Celsius for change in thermodynamic temperature but set so that 0 K is absolute zero and the candela which is roughly equivalent to the international candle unit of illumination were introduced Later another base unit the mole a unit of amount of substance equivalent to the Avogadro number number of specified molecules was added along with several other derived units The system was promulgated by the General Conference on Weights and Measures French Conference generale des poids et mesures CGPM in 1960 At that time the metre was redefined in terms of the wavelength of a spectral line of the krypton 86 atom krypton 86 being a stable isotope of an inert gas that occurs in undetectable or trace amounts naturally and the standard metre artefact from 1889 was retired 16 Today the International system of units consists of 7 base units and innumerable coherent derived units including 22 with special names The last new derived unit the katal for catalytic activity was added in 1999 All the base units except the second are now defined in terms of exact and invariant constants of physics or mathematics barring those parts of their definitions which are dependent on the second itself As a consequence the speed of light has now become an exactly defined constant and defines the metre as 1 299 792 458 of the distance light travels in a second The kilogram was defined by a cylinder of platinum iridium alloy until a new definition in terms of natural physical constants was adopted in 2019 As of 2022 the range of decimal prefixes has been extended to those for 1030 quetta and 10 30 quecto See alsoBinary prefix Symbol placed before units of digital information to indicate multiplication by a power of two Electrostatic units Physical system of measurement that uses the centimetre gram and second as base unitsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets History of measurement ISO 31 Superseded standard on quantities and units ISO IEC 80000 International standard on physical quantities and units of measurement List of metric units Class of units of measurement Metrology Science of measurement and its application Non SI units mentioned in the SI Unit accepted for use in the International System of Units Outline of metrology and measurement Topical index of English Wikipedia articles about metrology and measurement Preferred metric sizes Metricated industry standards Unified Code for Units of Measure System of codes for unambiguously representing measurement unitsReferences The International System of Units SI 9th Edition PDF Bureau International des Poids et Mesures 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 30 May 2019 Gullberg Jan 1997 2 4 Decimal Position System Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers New York and London W W Norton and Company p 52 ISBN 978 0 393 04002 9 Non SI units accepted for use with SI Metric System 26 July 2018 Retrieved 10 July 2023 International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed pp 121 122 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 Urone Peter Paul Hinrichs Roger Dirks Kim Sharma Manjula 2020 College Physics OpenStax ISBN 978 1 947172 01 2 Dybkaer Rene 1 March 2002 The Tortuous Road to the Adoption of katal for the Expression of Catalytic Activity by the General Conference on Weights and Measures Clinical Chemistry 48 3 586 590 doi 10 1093 clinchem 48 3 586 ISSN 0009 9147 PMID 11861460 What is a mise en pratique BIPM 2011 Retrieved 11 March 2011 OIML Mutual Acceptance Arrangement MAA International Organization of Legal Metrology Archived from the original on 21 May 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2013 Alder Ken 2002 The Measure of all Things The Seven Year Odyssey That Transformed the World London Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11507 8 17th General Conference on Weights and Measures 1983 Resolution 1 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Mise en pratique for the definition of the metre in the SI BIPM 20 May 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Lewis A 4 July 2019 1983 realisation of the metre definition PDF Varenna Summer School National Physical Laboratory p 15 Retrieved 10 July 2023 The Latest Landmark Change to Kilogram Approved AP News Associated Press 16 November 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Mise en pratique for the definition of the kilogram in the SI BIPM 7 July 2021 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Resnick Brian 20 May 2019 The new kilogram just debuted It s a massive achievement Vox Retrieved 17 June 2023 McGreevy Thomas 1997 Cunningham Peter ed The Basis of Measurement Volume 2 Metrication and Current Practice Chippenham Picton Publishing ISBN 978 0 948251 84 9 Brewster D 1830 The Edinburgh Encyclopaedia p 494 Working Group 2 of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology JCGM WG 2 2008 International vocabulary of metrology Basic and general concepts and associated terms VIM PDF 3rd ed International Bureau of Weights and Measures BIPM on behalf of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology 1 12 retrieved 12 April 2012 a href wiki Template Citation title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Good Michael Some Derivations of E mc2 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2011 International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed pp 111 120 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 Jayson Joel S January 2014 The Daniell cell Ohm s law and the emergence of the International System of Units American Journal of Physics 82 1 60 65 arXiv 1512 07306 Bibcode 2014AmJPh 82 60J doi 10 1119 1 4826445 ISSN 0002 9505 S2CID 119278961 Science Tim Sharp 2017 09 15T15 47 00Z Astronomy How Big Is Earth Space com Retrieved 22 October 2019 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Metre measurement Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 October 2019 Standard Table Sizes Bassett Furniture Retrieved 22 October 2019 The Average Height of NBA Players From Point Guards to Centers The Hoops Geek 9 December 2018 Retrieved 22 October 2019 RUBINGHSCIENCE ORG Using Euro coins as weights www rubinghscience org Retrieved 22 October 2019 Coin Specifications U S Mint www usmint gov 20 September 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2019 Fifty Pence Coin www royalmint com Retrieved 22 October 2019 Lumens and the Lighting Facts Label Energy gov Retrieved 11 June 2020 McGreevy Thomas 1995 Cunningham Peter ed The Basis of Measurement Volume 1 Historical Aspects Chippenham Picton Publishing ISBN 978 0 948251 82 5 O Hara James Gabriel 1983 Gauss and the Royal Society The Reception of His Ideas on Magnetism in Britain 1832 1842 Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 38 1 17 78 doi 10 1098 rsnr 1983 0002 ISSN 0035 9149 JSTOR 531344 S2CID 145724822 Van Baak D A October 2013 Re creating Gauss s method for non electrical absolute measurements of magnetic fields and moments American Journal of Physics 81 10 738 744 Bibcode 2013AmJPh 81 738V doi 10 1119 1 4816806 ISSN 0002 9505 International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed p 109 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 Thomson William Joule James Prescott Maxwell James Clerk Jenkin Flemming 1873 First Report Cambridge 3 October 1862 In Jenkin Flemming ed Reports on the Committee on Standards of Electrical Resistance Appointed by the British Association for the Advancement of Science London pp 1 3 Retrieved 12 May 2011 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Historical context of the SI Unit of electric current ampere The NIST Reference on Constants Units and Uncertainty Retrieved 10 April 2011 James Clerk Maxwell 1954 1891 A Treatise on Electricity amp Magnetism vol 2 3rd ed Dover Publications Carron Neal 2015 Babel of Units The Evolution of Units Systems in Classical Electromagnetism arXiv 1506 01951 physics hist ph In the beginning Giovanni Giorgi International Electrotechnical Commission 2011 Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 5 April 2011 System of Measurement Units IEEE Global History Network Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE Retrieved 21 March 2011 Notions de physique Systemes d unites Symbols used in physics units of measure in French Hydrelect info Retrieved 21 March 2011 Michon Gerard P 9 September 2000 Final Answers Numericana com Retrieved 11 October 2012 Resolution of the 3rd meeting of the CGPM 1901 General Conference on Weights and Measures Retrieved 11 October 2012 IUPAC Gold Book IUPAC mole M03980 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry doi 10 1351 goldbook M03980 S2CID 241546445 New SI prefixes clear the way for quettabytes of storage The Register 22 November 2022 Retrieved 23 November 2022 External linksLearning materials related to Using the Metric System at Wikiversity