Chapter 1.1
Chapter 1.1
Chapter 1.1
CHAPTER 1
PHYSICAL
QUANTITIES AND
UNITS
1
Physics is a mathematical
science. The underlying
concepts and principles have a
mathematical basis.
Physical Quantities
Physics involves the study of physical
quantities and its measurement.
Base Quantities
Base quantities are the
quantities that are conventionally
accepted as functionally
independent of one another.
7 base quantities
The Systme International (SI) is based on
7 fundamental or base quantities and its
units are given below:
Beware !
A distance of thirty metres should be
written as 30 m and not 30 ms or 30 m
s
The letter s is never included in a unit
for the plural.
If a space is left between 2 letters, the
letters denote different units.
So, 30 m s would mean thirty metre
seconds and 30 ms would mean 30
milliseconds.
8
A derived quantity is a
physics quantity that consists of
some combination of base units.
10
11
area
square meter
m
volume
cubic meter
m
speed, velocity
meter per second
m/s
or m s-1
acceleration
meter per second squared
m/s/s or m s-2
density
kilogram per cubic meter
kg
m-3
amount concentration
mole per cubic meter mol m-3
force
kg m s-2
Newton
work/energy
kg m2 s-2
Joule
power
kg m2 s-3
Watt
pressure
kg m-1 s-2
Pascal 12
Magnitude/size
Magnitudes of physical quantities range
from very very large to very very small.
E.g. mass of sun is 1030 kg and mass of
electron is 10-31 kg.
Hence, prefixes are used to describe
these magnitudes.
Common prefixes
13
14
Order of magnitude in
metres
Earth to universe
1.4 x 1026
Earth to Sun
1.5 x 1011
Length of car
4
Diameter of hair
5 x 10-4
Diameter of an atom
3 x 10-10
Diameter of a nucleus 6 x 10-15
15
Scientific notation
Large and small values are usually
expressed in scientific notation i.e. as a
simple number multiplied by a power of
ten.
A value expressed in the A x 10n form
where 1 A 10 is called the standard
form scientific notation.
There is far less chance of making a
mistake with the number of zeroes
E.g 154 000 000 would be written as 1.54
x 108
0.00034
would be written as 3.416
-4
Conversions
Since there are so many base units
and derived units, and orders of
magnitudes, conversions from one
unit to another is inevitable
Let us try some conversions;
a) 30 mm2
= ? m2
b) 865 km h-1 = ? m s-1
c) 300 g cm-3 = ? kg m-3
17
a) 30 mm2 = ? m2
1 mm
10 m
1 mm 10
2
30 mm 30 10
m or 3.0 10
m
18
240 m s
19
300 g cm
3.0 10 kg m
-3
20