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physical quantities
fundamental quantities base S.I. units multiple and submultiple base units
derived quantities derived S.I. units multiple and submultiple derived units
Introduction
Measurement is something we use every day to nd the value or size of things. We describe the results using a wide variety of units, depending on what it is we are measuring, but the results always begin with a number usually followed by the unit. For example, a cricket score might be 85 runs; a cake recipe may mention 6 cups of our; a salary may be 2500 dollars; and the size of a hotel could be 100 rooms. Here the units of measurement are runs, cups, dollars and rooms. The units we use in physics are internationally agreed, and generally used, particularly in science, industry and technology. They are called S.I. units. S.I. stands for the French Systme International (International System). This system of units was agreed at a conference of prominent scientists in France in 1960. This chapter will introduce you to quantities measured in physics as well as the units in which they are measured.
unit of measurement
Physical quantities
fundamental quantity
In a school physics laboratory, there are a host of different quantities we may measure, from the length of a bench to the voltage supplied by a battery. In physics, seven quantities are seen as fundamental. You will come across ve
of the fundamental quantities in your course: mass (gure 1.1), length, time, temperature and electric current. (The other two fundamental quantities are luminous intensity and amount of substance.) Each of these fundamental quantities is represented by a symbol, as shown in table 1.1.
Table 1.1 Five fundamental quantities and their symbols.
Symbol for the quantity m l t T I
Figure 1.1 Mass is a fundamental quantity in physics. The kilogram standard mass, shown here, is kept at Svres.
base unit
The units kelvin and ampere are named after famous scientists.
The kilogram
The standards kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures are primary standards. Other standards, made in properly equipped laboratories and based on those at the International Bureau, are called secondary standards.
kilogram standard
The kilogram is the base unit of mass. The kilogram is dened as the mass of a particular platinumiridium cylinder kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures at Svres, near Paris, in France, stored under specied conditions (gure 1.1). This cylinder is called the kilogram standard. All other masses are ultimately measured against this standard (gure 1.2).
Figure 1.2 A high-precision balance. Values for mass are ultimately based upon the primary standard kilogram at Svres.
Thus if we say that a certain mass is 40 kilograms, what we mean is that the mass is 40 times that of the kilogram standard. The mass of a standard must not change with time or with environmental conditions. The kilogram standard is made from an alloy chosen for its resistance to corrosion and is kept under very closely controlled conditions (gure 1.1).
Figure 1.3
A caesium clock.
Caesium clocks are so constant that two of them will agree with each other to within 1 second in 300 000 years! This means that if the two clocks were switched on at the same time, then after they had been working for a period of 300 000 years, the times they showed would differ by no more than 1 second! Measurements using a caesium clock show that the Earths daily rotation is not constant, but is very gradually slowing down.
submultiple unit
multiple unit
Imagine that two students are asked to measure the thickness of a leaf of their exercise books. One student gives the thickness as 0.2 millimetre while the other expresses the result as 0.0002 metre. Which of these two statements gives one a better idea of the thickness? You may have a perfectly good idea of the size of a millimetre and of a metre, but it is more difcult to visualise two ten-thousandths of a metre than twotenths of a millimetre. So there is a need for units smaller than the base unit, and these are called submultiple units. We also need units of length that are greater than the metre. Imagine you are to run a marathon race. Is it easier to visualise a distance of 26 kilometres rather than 26 000 metres? Units such as the kilometre, which are larger than the fundamental unit, are called multiple units. There is a need for both multiple and submultiple units of most quantities. These units are the base unit multiplied by a power of 10. The factor by which the base unit is multiplied is given by a prex, as shown in table 1.3.
Table 1.3
Submultiples
p n m c d da h k M G T
1012 109 106 103 102 101 101 102 103 106 109 1012
The abbreviation da is hardly ever used. Hectoand deca- are also seldom used nowadays in physics. A hectare is a unit of area used for land measurement. One hectare is 10 000 m2, roughly 2.5 acres.
Multiples
micron
The unit micrometre is sometimes called the micron, written as (the Greek mu), without the m for metre.
Liquid volumes in chemistry are commonly measured in dm3. 1 decimetre3 = 1 dm3 = (101 m)3 = 103 m3 This is 1 litre (l). The litre is used in chemistry and in commerce (gure 1.4).
ITQ1
How many cm3 are there in 1 dm3?
ITQ2
Express the following numbers in standard form: (i) 2000 (ii) 0.002 34 (iii) 3833.33 (iv) 0.000 000 02 (v) 123 456.789
Figure 1.4 A lling station in Trinidad. What is the unit used on the pump for measuring the quantity of gasoline bought?
Standard form
This is a convenient way of writing very large or very small numbers, by expressing them as a number between 1 and 9.9999 that is multiplied by a power of 10. Standard form is also referred to as scientic notation. Examples are 6.02 1023 2.000 103 2 103
ITQ3
Express (i) 10 000 milliseconds in seconds (ii) 2000 km in metres (iii) 2000 km in megametres (iv) 0.002 g in micrograms Take care to write the symbols correctly.
Derived quantities
derived quantity
Fundamental quantities can be multiplied or divided. For example, length (as in distance travelled) may be divided by time to nd a speed. The resulting quantity, speed in this example, is called a derived quantity. Another derived quantity is density, which is mass per unit volume. density mass volume
Some other examples of derived S.I. quantities are shown in table 1.4.
Table 1.4
Derived quantity acceleration area density electric charge energy force momentum potential difference power pressure velocity volume
derived unit
The units used to measure derived quantities are called derived units. For example, derived quantity, speed = distance travelled (length) time taken (time) metre m = second s
Full stops are not used within units: we would write 5 m s1, not 5 m. s.1. We also leave a space between the m and the s, so we write m s1, not ms1, because ms means millisecond.
So the unit of speed is the derived unit, m/s, or m s1. We say that the unit of speed has the dimensions metre/second, or m s1. Any unit obtained by multiplying or dividing base units is a derived unit.
newton
density