Summary and Main Ideas
Summary of lessons so far
The following are the main ideas from the past few lessons:
- Physical quantities are a characteristic or property of an object that we can measure or calculate from other measurements.
- Units are standards for expressing and comparing the measurement of physical quantities. We can express all units as combinations of four fundamental units.
- The four fundamental units we will use in this text are the meter (for length), the kilogram (for mass), the second (for time), and the ampere (for electric current). These units are part of the metric system, which uses powers of 10 to relate quantities over the vast ranges encountered in nature.
- Scientists abbreviate the four fundamental units as follows: meter, m; kilogram, kg; second, s; and ampere, A. The metric system also uses a standard set of prefixes to denote each order of magnitude greater than or lesser than the fundamental unit itself.
- Unit conversions involve changing a value expressed in one type of unit to another type of unit. This is done by using conversion factors, which are ratios relating equal quantities of different units.
Glossary of words
Physical quantity
a characteristic or property of an object that can be measured or calculated from other measurements
Units
a standard used for expressing and comparing measurements
SI units
the international system of units that scientists in most countries have agreed to use; includes units such as meters, liters, and grams
English units
system of measurement used in the United States; includes units of measurement such as feet, gallons, and pounds
Fundamental units
units that can only be expressed relative to the procedure used to measure them
Derived units
units that can be calculated using algebraic combinations of the fundamental units
Second
the SI unit for time, abbreviated (s)
Meter
the SI unit for length, abbreviated (m)
Kilogram
the SI unit for mass, abbreviated (kg)
Metric system
a system in which values can be calculated in factors of 10
Order of magnitude
refers to the size of a quantity as it relates to a power of 10
Conversion factor
a ratio expressing how many of one unit are equal to another unit
This lesson is part of:
The Nature of Physics