Physics Help
Physical Units
Physical unit
In
physics and
metrology, units are standards for
measurement of
physical quantities that need clear definitions to be useful.
Reproducibility of experimental results is central to the
scientific method. To facilitate this we need
standards, and to get convenient measures of the standards we need a
system of units. Scientific systems of units are a formalization of the
concept of
weights and measures, initially developed for commercial purposes.
Different systems of units are based on different choices of
a set of
fundamental units. The most widely used system of units is the
international system, or SI system, of units derived from the seven
SI base units. All
other SI units can be derived from these base units.
Other systems of units that have been used for various
purposes include:
Any value of a physical quantity is expressed as a comparison
to a unit of that quantity. For example, the value of a physical quantity Q is
written as the product of a unit [Q] and a numerical factor:
-
Q = n * [Q] = n [Q]
The multiplication sign is usually left out, just as it is
left out between variables in scientific notation of formulas. In formulas the
unit [Q] can be treated as if it was a kind of physical
dimension: see
dimensional analysis for more on this treatment.
A distinction should be made between units and standards. A
unit is fixed by its definition, and is independent of physical conditions such
as temperature. By contrast, a standard is a physical realization of a unit, and
realizes that unit only under certain physical conditions. For example, the
metre is a unit, while a metal bar is a standard. One metre is the same length
regardless of temperature, but a metal bar will be one metre long only at a
certain temperature.
For most quantities a unit is absolutely necessary to
communicate values of that physical quantity. Try for example to tell someone
the value of a length without the use of a unit. That is not possible because
you can't verbally describe a length.
But not all quantities require a unit of their own. Using
physical laws, units of quantities can be expressed as combinations of units of
other quantities. Thus only a small set of units is required. These units are
taken as the basic units. Other units are derived units.
Derived units are a matter of convenience, as they can be expressed in terms of
basic units. Which units are considered basic is a matter of choice.
The basic units of SI are actually not the smallest set.
Smaller sets have been defined. There are sets in which the
electric and
magnetic field have the same unit. This is based on physical laws that show
that electric and magnetic field are actually different manifestations of the
same phenomenon. In some fields of science such systems of units are highly
favored over the SI system.
Conversion of units involves comparison of different standard
physical values, either of a single physical quantity or of a physical quantity
and a combination of other physical quantities.
Thus conversion factors between units are always imprecise to
some level and improved values may be found when a more precise comparison is
performed.
In the
SI
system some letters denoting conveniently chosen numerical values can be used as
prefixes to any of the units.
For example, c = 0.01, and thus cm = 0.01 * m and cN = 0.01 *
N
There is one exception: for historical reasons, the unit of
mass, kg, already contains a prefix and prefixes are not to be added to it but
to g. Thus: mg and not µkg (with "µ" = "micro-"). To many this is a source of
mistakes and frustration.
Use of prefixes does not involve any unit conversion, as the
prefixes are just defined as numerical values. They can not be
imprecise.
For example, the expressions 'cm' and '0.01 m' mean
mathematically exactly the same thing. It is not a unit conversion, just a
mathematical conversion, just like '4 * 5' and '20' are mathematical expressions
with the same meaning.
Hints:
-
Use formulas involving physical values whenever possible,
be reluctant to split up physical values into units and numerical values, as
you increase the complexity by a factor of two!
-
If you calculate the value of a physical quantity A from a
formula involving a combination of other physical quantities (B, C, D), you
don't have to calculate the resulting unit: if you just convert all values of
B, C, D so as to be expressed in SI units (no prefixes), the resulting unit is
the SI unit of the quantity A. The SI system is set up to ensure this
convenience. Don't use the gram instead of the kilogram, because naturally
that will not work!
-
Don't let definitions like density is mass per unit
volume obscure your understanding of units. It sounds as if it says:
-
D = m / [V] (WRONG)
This is not true. The correct statement is that density is
mass divided by volume:
-
D = m / V
The sentence `density is mass per unit volume' uses another
way of perceiving the concept. It says that the density D_s of system s is the
mass m_u of a subsystem u of s, divided by the volume V_u of subsystem u,
given that the volume of subsystem u is unit volume:
-
D_s = m_u / V_u
-
V_u = 1 [V]
Mathematical rules for calculations with units follow from
the formula for physical values, Q = n * [Q]
-
Values of the same quantity can of course always be added,
but not by just adding their numerical values. The numerical value is not all
of the value of the physical quantity.
The units in the physical values have to be converted
so that they are the same. Then the numerical values can be added. The same
principle is known from adding fractions: you have to make the denominators
the same and then you can add the numerators.
-
When a unit is divided by itself, the division yields a
unitless 1.
-
When two different units are multiplied by each other, the
result is a new unit. For instance, in SI, the unit of momentum is one
kilogram multiplied by one meter divided by one second. See also
dimensional analysis.
-
Expressing a physical value in terms of another unit:
Starting with:
-
Q = n_i * [Q]_i
just replace the origional unit [Q]_i with its meaning in
terms of the desired unit [Q]_f, e.g. if [Q]_i = c_ij * [Q]_f, then:
-
Q = n_i * c_ij * [Q]_f
Now n_i and c_ij are both numerical values, so just
calculate their product.
Or, which is just mathematically the same thing, multiply Q
by unity, the product is still Q:
-
Q = n_i * [Q]_i * ( c_ij * [Q]_f/[Q]_i )
For example, you have an expression for a physical value Q
involving the unit feet per second ([Q]_i) and you want it in terms
of the unit miles per hour ([Q]_f):
-
Find facts relating the original unit to the desired
unit:
-
1 mile = 5280 feet and 1 hour = 3600 seconds
-
Next use the above equations to construct a fraction that
has a value of unity and that contains units such that, when it is
multiplied with the original physical value, will cancel the original units:
-
1 = (1 mile) / (5280 feet) and 1 = (3600 seconds) / (1
hour)
-
Last, multiply the original expression of the physical
value by the fraction, called a conversion factor, to obtain the same physical value expressed in
terms of a different unit. Note: since the conversion factors have a
numerical value of unity, multiplying any physical value by them will not
change that value.
See also:
units unit conversion
computer program
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