In 1960, the Eleventh General Conference
on Weights and Measures was held in Paris. They adopted a universal system of
measurement units called Le Systeme International d'Unites (French), which is a revised
version of the metric system. This International System, or SI, as
it is commonly referred to, is used for commerce and Science around the world.
There are seven SI base units.
Everything that is measurable, can be measured by these base units, or by units derived
from these bases. The table below shows the bases, their international symbols, and
what they are used to measure.
Table 2.1a SI Base Units
| Base Quantity |
Name of unit |
Symbol |
| Length |
Meter |
m |
| Mass |
Kilogram |
kg |
| Time |
Second |
s |
| Electrical Current |
Ampere |
A |
| Temperature |
Kelvin |
K |
| Amount of Substance |
Mole |
mol |
| Luminous Intensity |
Candela |
cd |
Units that are made up of some
combination of SI base units are called Derived Units. Table 2.1b
shows some of the derived units that are common in Science.
Table 2.1b Derived Units
| Base Quantity |
Common Units |
| Volume |
dm3 |
| Density |
kg/dm3 |
| Acceleration |
m/s2 |
| Force |
kg x m/s2 |
Prefixes are used with the base units in
order to increase or decrease the value that they represent. All of the prefixes
represent some factor of 10, and they can be used with any of the SI base units.
Table 1.3 represents some of the most common prefixes, their symbols, and the number that
is used to multiply the base factor by.
Table 2.1c SI Prefixes
| Prefix |
Symbol |
Multiply the base by |
| exa- |
E |
1 000 000 000 000 000 000 |
| peta- |
P |
1 000 000 000 000 000 |
| tera- |
T |
1 000 000 000 000 |
| giga |
G |
1 000 000 000 |
| mega |
M |
1 000 000 |
| kilo |
k |
1000 |
| hecto- |
h |
100 |
| deca- |
da |
10 |
| deci- |
d |
0.1 |
| centi |
c |
0.01 |
| milli- |
m |
0.001 |
| micro- |
u |
0.000 001 |
| nano- |
n |
0.000 000 001 |
| pico- |
p |
0.000 000 000 001 |
| femto- |
f |
0.000 000 000 000 001 |
| atto- |
a |
0.000 000 000 000 000 001 |
Your teacher can tell you which units and prefixes are most
important for the course you are studying. You must become comfortable with
converting units and applying prefixes. Several practice pages can be found in the
links below.
Now, be sure to check out the worksheets
and the online
quizzes!
The
International System of Measurements Quizzes |

|
Quiz 2-1a Match the physical
quantities to the SI base units. |

|
Quiz 2-1b Multiple choice questions
about SI prefixes and symbols. |

|
Quiz 2-1c Fill-in questions about SI
conversions. |

|
Quiz 2-1d Crossword puzzle on SI. |
The
International System of Measurements Worksheets |

|
Worksheet 2-1a - SI Conversions. |
The
International System of Measurements Links |

|
Reference Table 2-1a - SI Prefixes, Base
Units and Derived Units |

|
Measurement Laboratory Activity |

|
Use of Units by Nick Ragusa (class of 2001) |
Please forward all questions, comments and criticisms to Gregory L. Curran.
© Copyright 2004 Fordham Preparatory School, All Rights Reserved.
Last Modified February 07, 2008 |