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SI Units and Measurements

A compact, tabular revision of SI base and derived units, the quantities they measure, common non-SI units, prefixes and physical constants, for CAPF Paper I General Science

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At a glance
SubjectGeneral Science
RevisionGeneral ScienceSi UnitsMeasurementsPhysicsPaper 1

One screen per section. Cover the right column and test yourself. The SI (Systeme International d'Unites) is the modern metric system with seven base units; everything else is derived from them. CAPF Paper I tests the "quantity to unit" pairing and a few standard non-SI units. Numerical values of constants below are the standard textbook figures; for the formally redefined values verify the latest.

The seven SI base units

Quantity SI base unit Symbol
Length metre m
Mass kilogram kg
Time second s
Electric current ampere A
Temperature kelvin K
Amount of substance mole mol
Luminous intensity candela cd

Note: mass, not weight, is a base quantity. Weight is a force (newton). The kilogram is the only base unit that historically carried the "kilo" prefix in its name.

Common derived SI units

Quantity Derived unit In base terms
Force newton (N) kg m/s squared
Energy / work joule (J) N m
Power watt (W) J/s
Pressure pascal (Pa) N/m squared
Frequency hertz (Hz) per second
Electric charge coulomb (C) A s
Potential difference volt (V) J/C
Electrical resistance ohm V/A
Capacitance farad (F) C/V
Magnetic flux weber (Wb) V s
Magnetic flux density tesla (T) Wb/m squared
Illuminance lux (lx) lumen/m squared

Quantity to unit at a glance

Quantity Unit
Area square metre
Volume cubic metre (litre as non-SI)
Density kilogram per cubic metre
Velocity / speed metre per second
Acceleration metre per second squared
Momentum kilogram metre per second
Heat joule (calorie as non-SI)
Sound intensity (level) decibel (dB)
Radioactivity becquerel (Bq); older unit curie
Absorbed radiation dose gray (Gy); older unit rad
Equivalent dose sievert (Sv)

Useful non-SI and special units

Unit Measures / equals
Light year Distance light travels in one year (about 9.46 trillion km), a unit of distance not time
Astronomical unit (AU) Mean Earth to Sun distance (about 149.6 million km)
Parsec About 3.26 light years
Angstrom One ten-billionth of a metre (10 to the power minus 10 m); atomic and wavelength scale
Nautical mile About 1.852 km; used at sea and in aviation
Knot One nautical mile per hour (speed)
Horsepower About 746 watts
Carat Mass of gemstones (200 mg); also gold purity (karat)
Bar Pressure; 1 bar is about 100,000 pascal
Calorie Heat; about 4.18 joules
Hertz Cycles per second (frequency)

SI prefixes

Prefix Symbol Factor
giga G 10 to the power 9
mega M 10 to the power 6
kilo k 10 to the power 3
centi c 10 to the power minus 2
milli m 10 to the power minus 3
micro (mu) 10 to the power minus 6
nano n 10 to the power minus 9
pico p 10 to the power minus 12

Physical constants worth recalling

Constant Standard value
Speed of light in vacuum about 3 times 10 to the power 8 m/s
Acceleration due to gravity (Earth, mean) about 9.8 m/s squared
Standard atmospheric pressure about 101,325 pascal (760 mm of mercury)
Speed of sound in air (room temperature) about 343 m/s
Absolute zero 0 kelvin, equal to about minus 273.15° Celsius
Avogadro number about 6.022 times 10 to the power 23 per mole

Temperature scale conversions

Conversion Relation
Celsius to Fahrenheit F equals (9/5)C plus 32
Celsius to Kelvin K equals C plus 273.15
Freezing point of water 0 C, 32 F, 273.15 K
Boiling point of water (sea level) 100 C, 212 F, 373.15 K

Cross-references

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