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The International System of Units, (symbol: SI) (for the French phrase Système International d'Unités), is the most widely used system of units. It is used for everyday commerce in virtually every country of the world except the United States, and it is universally used in scientific work. SI was selected from the existing Metre- Kilogram- Second system of units (MKS), with the addition of extra units, rather than the older Centimetre-Gram-Second system of units (CGS). SI is sometimes referred to as the metric system (especially in the United States, which has not widely adopted it, although it has been used more commonly in recent years, and the UK, where conversion is incomplete). However, not all metric units of measurement are accepted as SI units.

There are seven base units and several derived units, together with a set of prefixes. Non-SI units can be converted to SI units (or vice versa) according to the conversion of units.

1 Origin

The units of the SI are decided by a series of international conferences organised by the standards organization Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (International Office of Weights and Measures). The SI was first given its name in 1960, and last added to in 19711971 is a common year starting on Friday (click for link to calendar). Events January January 1 British divorce Reform Act comes into force January 2 66 die in stairway crush at Rangers v Celtic football match, Glasgow, Scotland. See Ibrox disaster. Janua.

The true origins of the SI or metric system date back to approximately 1640Events December 1 Portugal regains its independence from Spain and John IV of Portugal becomes king. Spain does not recognize the indepedence before 1668 Charles I summons and rapidly dismisses the Short Parliament in an attempt to fund the second of the. It was invented by French scientists, and was given a huge boost in popularity by the French RevolutionThe period of the French Revolution in the history of France covers the years between 1789 and 1799, in which democrats and republicans overthrew the absolute monarchy and the Roman Catholic Church perforce underwent radical restructuring. While France wo of 1789Events January 7 First nationwide United States election January 21 The first American novel, The Power of Sympathy or the Triumph of Nature Founded in Truth is printed in Boston, Massachusetts January 23 Georgetown College becomes the first Catholic coll. The metric system tried to choose units which were non-arbitrary, merging well with the revolution's official ideology of "Pure Reason". The layout of the metric system may have been based on the idealistic world-view of ancient Greeks, who theorized that there were four basic elements: earth, water, fire and air.

The most important unit is that of length: one metre was intended to be equal to 1/10,000,000thof the distance from the pole to the equator along the meridian through Paris. This is approximately 10% longer than one yardThis article is about the unit of measure known as the yard''. For other definitions, see Yard (disambiguation). A yard (abbr. yd is an imperial unit of length, defined as 3 feet or 36 inches, which is exactly 0. 9144 metres, presuming international inche. Later on, a platinum rod with a rigid, X-shaped cross section was produced to serve as the easy-to-check standard for one metre's length. However, due to a miscalculation by researchers of the flattening effect the earth's rotation had on its circumference, the first platinum prototype was short by 0.2 millimetres. Then a multiple of a specific radiation wavelength was introduced to abstractly define the (unchanged) length of the metre unit, and finally the metre was defined as the distance travelled by light in a vacuum in a specific period of time.

The unit of mass is the kilogram, which was defined by a cube filled with distilled pure water at its densest (+4° Celsius) and having sides equal to 1/10th of a metre. This volume contains one kilogram of water. One kilogram is about 10% heavier than two poundOfficially the pound is the name for at least three different units of mass: the pound (avoirdupois the troy pound the obsolete imperial pound There also exists an unofficial metric pound . While most standards bodies define the pound as a unit of mass, ms (2 lb). The cubic space is also known as one litreThe litre (or liter in US) is a metric unit of volume. The litre is not an SI unit, but is "accepted for use with the International System". The symbol for the litre is the lowercase letter l or the uppercase letter L . A cursive or script small letter l so volume of different liquids can be compared. Later on, a platinum-iridium metal cylinder was manufactured to serve as the one kilogram weight standard and remained so ever since.

The unit of temperature became the centigrade or inverted Celsius grade, which means the mercury scale is divided into 100 equal length parts between the water-ice mixture and the boiling point of pure, distilled water. Boiling water thus becomes one hundred degrees centigrade hot and freezing is zero degrees. This is the metric unit of temperature in everyday use. A hundred years later, scientists discovered there is an absolute minimum temperature and nothing can be colder than that. This prompted experts to relocate the zero place to mark this temperature, thus creating the Kelvin scale.

The metric unit of time remained the second. One definition of day is 86,400 seconds. The formal definition of the second has been changed several times for enhanced scientific requirements (astronomic observations, tuning fork clock, quartz clock and then caesiumCaesium (also spelled cesium and pronounced /'sizm/, though it goes against Latin phonetics) is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Cs and atomic number 55. It is a soft silvery-gold Alkali metal which is one of at least three met atomic clock) but wristwatch users remain relatively unaffected.

The swift worldwide adoption of the metric system as a tool of economy and everday commerce was based mainly on the lack of customary systems in many countries to adequately describe some concepts, or as a result of an attempt to standardize the many regional variations in the customary system. International politics also factored into the choice as many countries made the industrial shift when Britain still had empire status, and had various feelings related to its position in the world. Scientifically, it provides ease when dealing with very large and small quantities because it lines up so well with our numeral system.

Cultural differences can be represented in the local everyday uses of metric units. For example, bread is sold in one-half, one or two kilogram sizes in many countries, but you buy them by multiples of one hundred grams in the former USSR.

Non-scientific people should not be put off by the fine-tuning that has happened to the metric base units over the past two hundred years, as experts regularly tried to refine the metric system to fit the best scientific researcher (e.g. MKG to CGS to SI system changes or the invention of Kelvin scale). These changes seldom affect the everyday use of metric units. The presence of these adjustments has been one reason advocates of the U.S. customary units have used against metrication.



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