The International System of Units (abbreviated SI) is the metric system used in science, industry, and medicine. Recognize SI units and their importance for measurment
The International System of Units (abbreviated SI, from the French Système international d'unités) is the metric system used in science, industry, and medicine. Depending on your age and geographic location, you might be very familiar with the "imperial" system, which includes units such as gallons, feet, miles, and pounds. The imperial system is used for "everyday" measurements in a few places, such as the United States. But in most of the world (including Europe) and in all scientific circles, the SI system is in common use. Scientific Units the SI and Metric Units: Mr. Causey teaches scientific units of the SI system, the metric system, and the CGS system. Mr. Causey also shares the major prefixes and their meanings. Science measurements are based on the metric system, so it is important that you know the metric base units and prefixes. There are seven base units in the SI system:
It should be apparent that the move into modern times has greatly refined the conditions of measurement for each basic unit in the SI system, making the measurement of, for example, the luminous intensity of a light source a standard measurement in every laboratory in the world. A light source made to produce 20 cd will be the same regardless of whether it is made in the United States, in the UK, or anywhere else. The use of the SI system provides all scientists and engineers with a common language of measurement. The SI units of measurement have an interesting history. Over time they have been refined for clarity and simplicity.
The basic SI units can be expressed as fractions and multiples of basic units by using a set of simple prefixes.
For example, when reading about chemical kinetics, you may encounter the terms "ms" or "ns," meaning "millisecond" and "nanosecond" respectively. Once you've become accustomed to the practice of using the prefixes, you will immediately know that the millisecond is 1/1000 of one second and is 1 million times larger than a nanosecond, which is 1/1000000000 of one second, or 10-9 seconds. Briefly review the basic SI units before you study the prefixes.
Keep in mind that prefixes should never be combined. Thus a millionth of a meter is a micrometer, not a millimillimeter, and a millionth of a kilogram is a milligram, not a microkilogram. In older usage, a micron (a measurement often encountered in physics and engineering) is the same as a micrometer, 10-6 meters. Another older form of usage, the millimicron, is one thousandth of a micrometer, or 1 thousandth of 10-6 meters, or 10-9 meter, now called a nanometer. While these older terms are not in common usage, they are often encountered in older publications, and knowing their modern equivalents is an advantage. Density and volume are two common measurements in chemistry. Describe the relationship between density and volume
If two water samples have different volumes, they still share a common measurement: the density. Density is another measurement derived from SI basic units. The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume. In this example, each volume of water is different and therefore has a specific and unique mass. The mass of water is expressed in grams (g) or kilograms (kg), and the volume is measured in liters (L), cubic centimeters (cm3), or milliliters (mL). Density is calculated by the dividing the mass by the volume, so that density is measured as units of mass/volume, often g/mL. If both water samples are at the same temperature, their densities should be identical, regardless of the samples' volume.
Different substances have different densities, so density is often used as a method to identify a material. Comparing the densities of two materials can also predict how substances will interact. Water is used as the common standard to substances, and it has a density of 1000 kg/m3 at Standard Temperature and Pressure (called STP). When an object is placed in water, the object's relative density determines whether it floats or sinks. If the object has a lower density than water, it will float to the top of the water. An object with a higher density will sink. For example, cork has a density of 240 kg/m3, so it will float. Air has a density of approximately 1.2 kg/m3, so it rises immediately to the top of a water column. The metals sodium (970 kg/m3) and potassium (860 kg/m3) will both float on water, while lead (11,340 kg/m3) will sink. Density: A Story of Archimedes and the Gold Crown: Is the crown made of pure gold? An ancient Greek king needs to know if he's been cheated by a goldsmith. He summons Archimedes, who decides to use density to determine the metal. But how can he determine the volume of the crown? Liquids tend to form layers when added to water. The sugar alcohol glycerol (1,261 kg/m3) will sink into the water and form a separate layer until it is thoroughly mixed (glycerol is soluble in water). Vegetable oil (approx. 900 kg/m3) will float on water, and no matter how vigorously mixed, will always return as a layer on the water surface (oil is not soluble in water). Water itself is a complicated and unique molecule. Even if the pressure is consistent, water's density will change based on the temperature. Recall that the three basic forms of matter are solid, liquid and gas (ignore plasma for the time being). As a rule of thumb, almost all materials are more dense in their solid or crystalline form than in their liquid form; place the solid form of almost any material on the surface of its liquid form, and it will sink. Water, on the other hand, does something very special: ice (the solid form of water) floats on liquid water. Look carefully at the relationship between water's temperature and its density. Beginning at 100 °C, the density of water steadily increases, as far as 4 °C. At that point, the density trend reverses. At 0 °C, water freezes to ice and floats. This table lists the densities of water at different temperatures and constant pressure.
The ability to measure temperature accurately was a major scientific advancement, putting absolute numbers on an observable phenomenon. State the key developments in the history of temperature measurement
To people in the 21st century, measuring temperature is a quick and easy thing to do. Thousands of years ago, however, things were different. Temperature-related phenomena were always being observed. Snow fell and collected in cold weather, and melted into liquid water when the air warmed in spring. Liquid water fell as rain when the air was warm. Ice melted when placed near a source of heat, and water completely boiled out of a pot on a hot stove. However, these are all qualitative observations. They do not generate a number: they do not tell us that water freezes at 0 °C, or that it boils at 100 °C. All we learn from observation is that heat and cold do something to water, or that water behaves differently when it is heated or cooled. In the 16th and 17th centuries, scientists refined the observations and experiments of the Byzantines and Greeks to produce rudimentary devices relating the amount of "hotness" or "coldness" in the air. The devices they built were called thermoscopes. These basic measuring tools utilized the expansion and contraction of air and water when heated and cooled. The concept was remarkable, but thermoscopes did not have a numeric scale. The thermoscope could not answer the question, "How hot is it today?" with a number, but it could give a relative measurement. The thermoscope was often a simple tube of gas over liquid. Thermoscopes also served as barometers (which measure pressure ). That made it difficult to use them as thermometers, but they reacted to both pressure and temperature. Even when early thermometers did have a numeric scale, the scales were not standardized.The dawn of the 18th century saw great change in thermometers, thanks to the work of Isaac Newton, Anders Celsius, and Daniel Fahrenheit.
Further advances led to faster-acting thermometers, which were useful in medicine and chemistry. Early thermometers did not record or hold the temperature they were measuring: if you removed the thermometer from the substance being measured, its reading would change. Scientists invented new thermometers that would maintain their reading, at least for a limited period of time, to reduce measurement errors and make it easier to record the temperature. Dial thermometers using bimetallic strips were also developed. The bimetallic strips are made from two dissimilar metals bonded together, with each metal having a different coefficient of thermal expansion. Upon heating or cooling, the two metals expand or contract at different rates, causing a bending or curvature to appear in the strip. This bending is useful as a transducer for the temperature reading; it can control a thermostatted circuit or drive a simple dial thermometer. Through the development of temperature measurement, however, one question remained unanswered: "How cold can it really get? How cold is absolute 0?" The trivial answer is "0 degrees," but what exactly does that mean? Temperature itself is the measurement of the average kinetic energy of a substance. The kinetic energy arises from the motion of atoms and molecules, and it is postulated that at absolute 0, there is no motion and therefore, no kinetic energy. Therefore, the temperature must be "absolute 0." The question remains: how much colder is absolute 0 than 0 °C? In 1848, Lord Kelvin (William Thomson) wrote a paper entitled "On An Absolute Thermometric Scale" about the need to seek out a thermodynamic zero temperature. Using the Celsius system for its measurement of degrees, Lord Kelvin calculated the ultimate cold temperature to be -273 °C. Today that is referred to as 0 K on the Kelvin thermodynamic temperature scale. Modern methods have refined the measurement to -273.16 °C. Temperature can be measured and represented in many different ways. The fundamental requirements of the practice involve accuracy, a standard, linearity, and reproducibility. The SI unit, chosen for its simplicity and relationship to thermodynamics, is the kelvin, named in honor of Lord Kelvin. While incrementally equal to the Celsius scale, the temperature in kelvins is a true representation of the kinetic energy in a thermodynamic sense. Chemistry and physics require many calculations involving temperature. Those calculations are always made in kelvins.
Although in most cases scientists are equipped with some sort of electronic calculator, there might be times when a conversion from one scale to another is required. Conversion tables can be used to convert a measurement to any scale from any other temperature scale, such as kelvin or Celsius.
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