Base unit of measurement: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Little_guru (talk) minor changes |
Little_guru (talk) highlighting numbers |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
In the language of [[measurement]], 'dimensions' are measurable attributes of reality such as 'time', 'distance', 'velocity', 'mass', 'weight', and so on. |
In the language of [[measurement]], '[[dimensions]]' are measurable attributes of reality such as '[[time]]', '[[distance]]', '[[velocity]]', '[[mass]]', '[[weight]]', and so on. |
||
Revision as of 11:14, 9 December 2001
In the language of measurement, 'dimensions' are measurable attributes of reality such as 'time', 'distance', 'velocity', 'mass', 'weight', and so on.
A system of Fundamental dimensions is such that every other dimension can be generated from them.
This system is considered by the System of Units made by
7
fundamental ones.
Traditionally, the accepted more used fundamental dimensions are
4
:
- mass,
- time,
- and electric current,
but, the other
3
fundamental dimensions can also be used for more complex physics problems:
Velocity, for example, is length divided by time, and so can be generated from the above list of fundamental dimensions.
Physics call velocity a derived dimension.
Please See also: dimensional analysis
/Talk
/Comments