International System of Units

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Also known as: SI, SI System, Système International d’Unités
French:
Système International d’Unités

International System of Units (SI), international decimal system of weights and measures derived from and extending the metric system of units. Adopted by the 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in 1960, it is abbreviated SI in all languages.

Rapid advances in science and technology in the 19th and 20th centuries fostered the development of several overlapping systems of units of measurements as scientists improvised to meet the practical needs of their disciplines. The early international system devised to rectify this situation was called the metre-kilogram-second (MKS) system. The CGPM added three new units (among others) in 1948: a unit of force (the newton), defined as that force which gives to a mass of one kilogram an acceleration of one metre per second per second; a unit of energy (the joule), defined as the work done when the point of application of a newton is displaced one metre in the direction of the force; and a unit of power (the watt), which is the power that in one second gives rise to energy of one joule. All three units are named for eminent scientists.

The 1960 International System builds on the MKS system. Its seven basic units, from which other units are derived, were defined as follows: for length, the metre, defined as the distance traveled by light in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 second; for mass, the kilogram, which equaled 1,000 grams as defined by the international prototype kilogram of platinum-iridium in the keeping of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Sèvres, France; for time, the second, the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of radiation associated with a specified transition of the cesium-133 atom; for electric current, the ampere, which was the current that, if maintained in two wires placed one metre apart in a vacuum, would produce a force of 2 × 10−7 newton per metre of length; for luminous intensity, the candela, defined as the intensity in a given direction of a source emitting radiation of frequency 540 × 1012 hertz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction of 1/683 watt per steradian; for amount of substance, the mole, defined as containing as many elementary entities of a substance as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12; and for thermodynamic temperature, the kelvin.

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Fun Facts of Measurement & Math

On May 20, 2019, the CGPM redefined the kilogram, the ampere, the mole, and the kelvin in terms of fundamental physical constants. For the kilogram, the constant chosen was Planck’s constant, which is defined as equal to 6.62607015 × 10−34 joule second. One joule is equal to one kilogram times metre squared per second squared. Since the second and the metre were already defined, the kilogram would then be determined by accurate measurements of Planck’s constant. The ampere was redefined such that the elementary charge is equal to 1.602176634 × 10−19 coulomb. The kelvin was redefined such that the Boltzmann constant is equal to 1.380649 × 10−23 joule per kelvin, and the mole was redefined such that the Avogadro constant is equal to 6.02214076 × 1023 per mole.

Widely used units in the SI system

A list of the widely used units in the SI system is provided in the table.

International System of Units (SI)
unit abbreviation physical quantity
Base units metre m length
second s time
kilogram kg mass
ampere A electric current
kelvin K thermodynamic temperature
candela cd luminous intensity
mole mol amount of substance
unit abbreviation number of metres approximate U.S. equivalent
Length kilometre km 1,000 0.62 mile
centimetre cm 0.01 0.39 inch
millimetre mm 0.001 0.039 inch
micrometre μm 0.000001 0.000039 inch
nanometre nm 0.000000001 0.000000039 inch
unit abbreviation number of square metres approximate U.S. equivalent
Area square kilometre sq km, or km2 1,000,000 0.3861 square mile
hectare ha 10,000 2.47 acres
are a 100 119.60 square yards
square centimetre sq cm, or cm2 0.0001 0.155 square inch
unit abbreviation number of cubic metres approximate U.S. equivalent
Volume cubic metre m3 1 1.307 cubic yards
cubic centimetre cu cm, cm3, or cc 0.000001 0.061 cubic inch
unit abbreviation number of litres approximate U.S. equivalent
Capacity kilolitre kl 1,000 1.31 cubic yards
litre l 1 61.02 cubic inches
centilitre cl 0.01 0.61 cubic inch
millilitre ml 0.001 0.061 cubic inch
microlitre μl 0.000001 0.000061 cubic inch
unit abbreviation number of grams approximate U.S. equivalent
Mass and weight metric ton t 1,000,000 1.102 short tons
gram g 1 0.035 ounce
centigram cg 0.01 0.154 grain
milligram mg 0.001 0.015 grain
microgram μg 0.000001 0.000015 grain
unit symbol physical quantity expressed in base units
Energy hertz Hz frequency 1/s
newton N force, weight (m × kg)/s2
joule J work, energy, quantity of heat (m2 × kg)/s2
pascal Pa pressure, stress kg/(m × s2)
watt W power (m2 × kg)/s3
coulomb C electric charge s × A
volt V electric potential difference (m2 × kg)/(s3 × A)
farad F electric capacitance (s2 × s2 × A2)/(m2 × kg)
ohm Ω electric resistance, reactance (m2 × kg)/(s3 × A2)
siemens S electric conductance (s3 × A2)/(m2 × kg)
weber Wb magnetic flux (m2 × kg)/(s2 × A)
tesla T magnetic induction kg/(s2 × A)
henry H inductance (m2 × kg)/(s2 × A2)
lumen lm luminous flux cd × sr
lux lx illuminance (cd × sr)/m2

Metric conversions

A list of metric conversions is provided in the table.

Common equivalents and conversion factors for U.S. Customary and SI systems
approximate common equivalents
*Common term not used in SI.
**Exact.
Source: National Bureau of Standards Wall Chart.
1 inch = 25 millimetres
1 foot = 0.3 metre
1 yard = 0.9 metre
1 mile = 1.6 kilometres
1 square inch = 6.5 square centimetres
1 square foot = 0.09 square metre
1 square yard = 0.8 square metre
1 acre = 0.4 hectare*
1 cubic inch = 16 cubic centimetres
1 cubic foot = 0.03 cubic metre
1 cubic yard = 0.8 cubic metre
1 quart (liq) = 1 litre*
1 gallon = 0.004 cubic metre
1 ounce (avdp) = 28 grams
1 pound (avdp) = 0.45 kilogram
1 horsepower = 0.75 kilowatt
1 millimetre = 0.04 inch
1 metre = 3.3 feet
1 metre = 1.1 yards
1 kilometre = 0.6 mile (statute)
1 square centimetre = 0.16 square inch
1 square metre = 11 square feet
1 square metre = 1.2 square yards
1 hectare* = 2.5 acres
1 cubic centimetre = 0.06 cubic inch
1 cubic metre = 35 cubic feet
1 cubic metre = 1.3 cubic yards
1 litre* = 1 quart (liq)
1 cubic metre = 264 gallons
1 gram = 0.035 ounce (avdp)
1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds (avdp)
1 kilowatt = 1.3 horsepower
conversions accurate within 10 parts per million
inches × 25.4** = millimetres
feet × 0.3048** = metres
yards × 0.9144** = metres
miles × 1.60934 = kilometres
square inches × 6.4516** = square centimetres
square feet × 0.0929030 = square metres
square yards × 0.836127 = square metres
acres × 0.404686 = hectares
cubic inches × 16.3871 = cubic centimetres
cubic feet × 0.0283168 = cubic metres
cubic yards × 0.764555 = cubic metres
quarts (liq) × 0.946353 = litres
gallons × 0.00378541 = cubic metres
ounces (avdp) × 28.3495 = grams
pounds (avdp) × 0.453592 = kilograms
horsepower × 0.745700 = kilowatts
millimetres × 0.0393701 = inches
metres × 3.28084 = feet
metres × 1.09361 = yards
kilometres × 0.621371 = miles (statute)
square centimetres × 0.155000 = square inches
square metres × 10.7639 = square feet
square metres × 1.19599 = square yards
hectares × 2.47105 = acres
cubic centimetres × 0.0610237 = cubic inches
cubic metres × 35.3147 = cubic feet
cubic metres × 1.30795 = cubic yards
litres × 1.05669 = quarts (liq)
cubic metres × 264.172 = gallons
grams × 0.0352740 = ounces (avdp)
kilograms × 2.20462 = pounds (avdp)
kilowatts × 1.34102 = horsepower
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
This article was most recently revised and updated by Erik Gregersen.