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Units, Symbols, and Conversions

These tables (also included in the Scientific Notation article below) show units, symbols, and conversion used throughout this website.
 - Base units of the International System
 - Derived units of the International System
 - Prefixes for units in the International System
 - Some common units defined in terms of SI units
 - Conversion factors for the U.S. Customery System, metric system, and International System
 - Commonly used symbols in scientific writing
Scientific Notation

Since the Encyclopedia is a work of science, in the articles it was necessary to follow the scientific style of using symbols, abbreviations, and exact names. This section discusses the more frequently used conventions in the Encyclopedia and includes tables for convenient reference. The relation between the three primary measurement systems—U.S. Customary, metric, and International—is also clarified.

U.S. Customary System and the metric system

Scientists and engineers have been using two major systems of units in measurement. These are commonly called the U.S. Customary System (inherited from the British Imperial System) and the metric system.

In the U.S. Customary System the units yard and pound with their divisions, such as the inch, and multiples, such as the ton, are basic. The metric system was developed during the eighteenth century and has been adopted for general use by most countries. It is used nearly everywhere for precise measurements in science. The meter and kilogram with their multiples, such as the kilometer, and fractions, such as the gram, are basic to the metric system.

In the U.S. Customary System, units of the same kind are related almost at random. For example, there are the units of length, the inch, yard, and mile. In the metric system the relationships between units of the same kind are strictly decimal (millimeter, meter, and kilometer).

However, to complicate matters, in scientific writing there is no uniformity within each of these two systems as to the choice of units for the same quantities. For example, the hour or the second, the foot or the inch, and the centimeter or the millimeter could be chosen by a scientist as the unit of measurement for the quantities time and length.

Introduction of the International System

To simplify matters and to make communication more understandable, an internationally accepted system of units has come into use. This is termed the International System of Units, which is abbreviated SI in all languages (from the French Systéme International d'Unités).

Fundamentally the system is metric with the base units derived from scientific formulas or natural constants. For example, the meter in the SI is defined as the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second.

The second in the SI is defined as the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium-133 atom.

Interestingly, the kilogram, the SI unit of mass, is still the mass of the kilogram kept at Sévres, France. However, it is possible that eventually the unit will be redefined in terms of atomic mass.

Although the SI is increasingly used by scientists and engineers, there are some other units in everyday use which will probably remain, for example, minute, hour, day, degree (angle), and liter. The point should be made, however, that these terms will not be employed in a scientific context if the SI is fully adopted.

Because of their extremely common use among scientists, several units are still permitted in conjunction with SI units, for example, the electronvolt, rad, roentgen, barn, and curie. In time their usage might be phased out.

One further point is that in October 1967 the Thirteenth General Conference of Weights and Measures decided to name the SI unit of thermodynamic temperature "kelvin" (symbol K) instead of "degree Kelvin" (symbol °K). For example, the notation is 273 K and not 273 ° K. The base units and derived units of the SI are shown in Tables 1 and 2.

Base units of the International System
Quantity Name of unit Unit symbol
length meter m
mass kilogram kg
time second s
electric current ampere A
temperature kelvin K
luminous intensity candela cd
amount of substance mole mol


In the SI the prefixes differ from a unit in steps of 103 . A list of prefix terms, symbols, and their factors is given in Table 3. Some examples of the use of these prefixes follow:
1000 m = 1 kilometer  =  1 km
1000 V = 1 kilovolt  =  1 kV
1 000000 Omega = 1 megohm  =  1M Omega
0.000 000 001 s = 1 nanosecond  =  1 ns


Only one prefix is to be employed for a unit. For example:
1000 kg = 1 Mg not 1 kkg
10–9 s = 1 ns not 1 mµ s
1 000 000 m = 1 Mm not 1 kkm


Also, when a unit is raised to a power, the power applies to the whole unit including the prefix. For example:

km2 = (km)2 = (1000 m)2 = 106 m2 not 1000 m2

Some common units defined in terms of SI units are given in Table 4 (the definitions in the fourth column are exact).

Conversion factors for the measurement systems

The Encyclopedia has retained the U.S. Customary and metric systems, but has incorporated SI units. Conversion factors between the three measurement systems are given in Table 5 for some prevalent units; in each of the subtables the user proceeds as follows:

To convert a quantity expressed in a unit in the left-hand column to the equivalent in a unit in the top row of a subtable, multiply the quantity by the factor common to both units. For example, to convert 7 ft to the equivalent in meters, go to sub-table A, "Units of Length," and find 1 ft in the left-hand column and m in the top row. The conversion factor common to these units is 0.3048. Therefore, 7 ft = 7 × 0.3048 = 2.1336 m.

The conversion factors have been carried out to seven significant figures, as derived from the fundamental constants and the definitions of the units. However, this does not mean that the factors are always known to that accuracy. Numbers followed by ellipses are to be continued indefinitely with repetition of the same pattern of digits. Factors written with fewer than seven significant digits are exact values. Numbers followed by an asterisk are definitions of the relation between the two units.

Units of temperature in measurement systems

Temperature is a basic physical quantity. It is a measure of the thermal energy of random motion of particles in a system. As such it has been chosen as one of the base quantities in the SI. It is to be treated as are the units of length, mass, time, electric current, and luminous intensity. In the SI the unit of length is the meter, the unit of time the second, and so on. The question arises as to the choice of the unit of temperature in the SI.

In the past it was customary to refer to scales of temperature, for example, the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales. On the Celsius scale, 0 designates the freezing point (ice point) and 100 the boiling point (steam point) of water. Corresponding numbers on the Fahrenheit scale are 32 and 212. There are 100 units between the ice point and steam point on the Celsius scale, and 180 units between these points in the Fahrenheit system.

By measuring the volume changes of a gas within the 100-unit interval of the ice point and steam point of water on the Celsius scale, it was found that a numerical value could be assigned for a basic unit of temperature. Careful measurement of this ice-steam interval in a gas thermometer determined that the ice point of water should be assigned the value of 273.15 kelvins. The unit of temperature was thus called the kelvin with the symbol K. Further experiments led to the decision to define the kelvin in the SI along the same lines but in terms of the triple point of water. This is the temperature and pressure at which ice, liquid water, and water vapor coexist at equilibrium. The triple point was chosen because it was a more reproducible value than the ice point.

This change led to the SI definition of temperature in terms of the triple point of water, which is exactly 273.16 kelvins.

It follows that the Celsius temperature (°C) is an intermediate scale. It is useful in defining Kelvin temperature in the SI. Celsius temperature (t) is related to Kelvin temperature (K) as follows:

tice point = 0°C
tsteam point = 100°C
0 K = –273.15°C


A summary of the conventions in the SI as proposed in the Thirteenth General Conference of Weights and Measures pertaining to temperature units is given below.

1. The unit of SI temperature is the kelvin, symbol K.

2. The word "scale" is not to be used except in terms of measurement of temperature between certain fixed points on the Celsius scale.

3. The terms "thermodynamic scale" or "absolute scale" are not to be used to describe temperature. The degree sign is to be eliminated with the symbol K.

4. When Celsius temperatures are used (°C), it is understood that the temperature unit is the kelvin.

Not all scientists and engineers have adopted the SI of temperature terminology. For this reason the contributors to the Encyclopedia have retained the term "scale" in relation to thermodynamic temperature. Furthermore, many engineers in the United States still use the Fahrenheit system in discussing practical engineering systems. In converting Fahrenheit (°F) to Celsius (°C) the following formula applies.

  °F –32°
°C =
  1.8


In converting Celsius to Fahrenheit the following formula can be used.

°F = (°C x 1.8) + 32°

In changing from Celsius terminology (t) to kelvin units (K) the following formula can be used.

K = t + 273.15

Symbols for the chemical elements

The mass number, atomic number, number of atoms, and ionic charge of an element are indicated by means of four indices placed around the symbol. The positions occupied are left upper index, mass number; left lower index, atomic number; right upper index, ionic charge; and right lower index, number of atoms of an element in a molecule or formula unit of a given species; for example, 126C, Ca2+, 02, and Al2O3. The atomic number, which is redundant, is omitted in most cases; that is, 126C can be written as 12C.

Ionic charge is indicated by a plus or minus superscript following the symbol of the ion; for multiple charges an arabic superscript numeral precedes the plus or minus sign, for example, Na+, NO3, Ca2+, PO43–. Chemical nomenclature

The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) has established definitive rules for chemical nomenclature. Chemical species are identified by a systematic name, frequently accompanied by a formula. Occasionally certain well-established so-called common names are used.

For inorganic compounds, systematic names of compounds are formed by identifying the constituents and their proportions in a specific order, for example, dinitrogen oxide (N2O). Also accepted by IUPAC is Stock's system, in which the proportions of the constituents are indicated indirectly, and roman numerals are used to represent the oxidation number or stoichiometric valence of an element, for example, iron(II) chloride (FeCl2). Complex compounds are also named according to rules specified by IUPAC; an example is potassium oxodichloroimidophosphate, K[POCl2(NH)]. Examples of accepted common names are diborane (B2H6), silane (SiH4), and ammonia (NH3).

There also are definitive rules for naming organic compounds. Because of the infinite variety of disciplines and industrial applications involving organic compounds, the rules encompass different types of names. Sometimes a single compound can correctly be identified by a number of names, for example, chloral hydrate is also known as 2,2,2- trichloro-1,1-ethanediol and trichloroacetaldehyde monohydrate.

Symbols in scientific writing

Throughout the Encyclopedia, symbols have been introduced in such a way that their translation into words or phrases will require minimal effort on the part of the reader. In most cases a symbol is defined at its first appearance in an article. For example:

"The energy E in a quantum of radiation of frequency nu (where the frequency is equal to the velocity of the radiation in a given medium divided by its wavelength in the same medium) is directly proportional to the frequency, or inversely proportional to the wavelength, according to the relation given in Eq. (6),

E = hnu (6)


where h is a universal constant known as Planck's constant. The value of h is 6.63 × 10-34 joule-second, and if nu is expressed in s–1, E is given in joules per quantum."

For convenience, symbols commonly encountered in scientific writing are listed here. Symbols following the ellipses and separated by commas are alternatives that are used only when there is some reason for not using the symbol given first.

Some frequently encountered symbols for particles and quanta are as follows:

neutron n pion pi
proton p muon µ
deuteron d electron e
triton t neutrino nu
alpha particle alpha photon gamma


The meaning of abbreviated notations for nuclear reactions should be the following:

initial nuclide (incoming particle(s) or quanta, outgoing particle(s) or quanta)

final nuclide Some examples are:

  14N(alpha, p)17O 59Co(n, gamma)60Co
  23Na(gamma, 3n)20Na 31P(gamma, pn)29Si


The Greek alphabet is frequently used to represent terms. A listing of the Greek alphabet is shown here.

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