The Système International d'Unités (SI),
the modern form of the metric system, is the most widely used system
of units and measures around the world.
The meter (m), which is
approximately 39.37 inches, was originally defined as one
ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. It
was later redefined in terms of the wavelengths of red light from a
krypton-86 source. Most recently the meter was defined as the length
of the path traveled by light in a vacuum during 1/299,792,458 of a
second.
The metric system is based on 10s. For
example, 10 decimeters make a meter (39.37 inches).
Units smaller than a meter have Latin
prefixes:
- Deci-
means 1/10 (one tenth); 10 decimeters make a meter.
- Centi-
means 1/100; 100 centimeters make a meter.
- Milli-
means 1/1,000; 1,000 millimeters make a meter.
Units larger than a meter have Greek
prefixes:
- Hecto-
means 100; a hectometer is 100 meters.
- Kilo-
means 1,000; a kilometer is 1,000 meters.
A meter is a
little more than a yard. A kilometer
is less than a mile.
Unit |
Value |
Kilometer
(km) |
1,000
Meters |
Hectometer
(hm) |
100
Meters |
Meter
(m) |
1
Meter |
Decimeter
(dm) |
1/10
Meter |
Centimeter
(cm) |
1/100
Meters |
Millimeter
(mm) |
1/1,000
Meters |
|