International System Of Quantities

The International System of Quantities (ISQ) is a standard system of quantities used in physics and in modern science in general.

It includes basic quantities such as length and mass and the relationships between those quantities. This system underlies the International System of Units (SI) but does not itself determine the units of measurement used for the quantities.

The system is formally described in a multi-part ISO standard ISO/IEC 80000 (which also defines many other quantities used in science and technology), first completed in 2009 and subsequently revised and expanded.

International System Of Quantities
Metrological dependencies be­tween the base units of the SI system

Base quantities

The base quantities of a given system of physical quantities is a subset of those quantities, where no base quantity can be expressed in terms of the others, but where every quantity in the system can be expressed in terms of the base quantities. Within this constraint, the set of base quantities is chosen by convention. There are seven ISQ base quantities. The symbols for them, as for other quantities, are written in italics.

The dimension of a physical quantity does not include magnitude or units. The conventional symbolic representation of the dimension of a base quantity is a single upper-case letter in roman (upright) sans-serif type.

Base quantity Symbol for quantity Symbol for dimension SI base unit SI unit symbol
length International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  metre m
mass International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  kilogram kg
time International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  second s
electric current International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  ampere A
thermodynamic temperature International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  kelvin K
amount of substance International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  mole mol
luminous intensity International System Of Quantities  International System Of Quantities  candela cd

Derived quantities

A derived quantity is a quantity in a system of quantities that is defined in terms of only the base quantities of that system. The ISQ defines many derived quantities and corresponding derived units.

Dimensional expression of derived quantities

The conventional symbolic representation of the dimension of a derived quantity is the product of powers of the dimensions of the base quantities according to the definition of the derived quantity. The dimension of a quantity is denoted by International System Of Quantities , where the dimensional exponents are positive, negative, or zero. The dimension symbol may be omitted if its exponent is zero. For example, in the ISQ, the quantity dimension of velocity is denoted International System Of Quantities . The following table lists some quantities defined by the ISQ.

Derived quantity Expression in SI base dimensions
frequency International System Of Quantities 
force International System Of Quantities 
pressure International System Of Quantities 
velocity International System Of Quantities 
area International System Of Quantities 
volume International System Of Quantities 
acceleration International System Of Quantities 

Dimensionless quantities

A quantity of dimension one is historically known as a dimensionless quantity (a term that is still commonly used); all its dimensional exponents are zero and its dimension symbol is International System Of Quantities . Such a quantity can be regarded as a derived quantity in the form of the ratio of two quantities of the same dimension. The named dimensionless units "radian" (rad) and "steradian" (sr) are acceptable for distinguishing dimensionless quantities of different kind, respectively plane angle and solid angle.

Logarithmic quantities

Level

The level of a quantity is defined as the logarithm of the ratio of the quantity with a stated reference value of that quantity. Within the ISQ it is differently defined for a root-power quantity (also known by the deprecated term field quantity) and for a power quantity. It is not defined for ratios of quantities of other kinds. Within the ISQ, all levels are treated as derived quantities of dimension 1.[citation needed] Several units for levels are defined by the SI and classified as "non-SI units accepted for use with the SI units". An example of level is sound pressure level, with the unit of decibel.

Other logarithmic quantities

Units of logarithmic frequency ratio include the octave, corresponding to a factor of 2 in frequency (precisely) and the decade, corresponding to a factor 10.

The ISQ recognizes another logarithmic quantity, information entropy, for which the coherent unit is the natural unit of information (symbol nat).[citation needed]

Documentation

The system is formally described in a multi-part ISO standard ISO/IEC 80000, first completed in 2009 but subsequently revised and expanded, which replaced standards published in 1992, ISO 31 and ISO 1000. Working jointly, ISO and IEC have formalized parts of the ISQ by giving information and definitions concerning quantities, systems of quantities, units, quantity and unit symbols, and coherent unit systems, with particular reference to the ISQ. ISO/IEC 80000 defines physical quantities that are measured with the SI units and also includes many other quantities in modern science and technology. The name "International System of Quantities" is used by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) to describe the system of quantities that underlie the International System of Units.

See also

Notes

References

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International System Of Quantities Base quantitiesInternational System Of Quantities Derived quantitiesInternational System Of Quantities DocumentationInternational System Of Quantities Further readingInternational System Of QuantitiesInternational System of UnitsPhysicsQuantity

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