narrow CW filters
On May 17, 4:20*pm, "Antonio Vernucci" wrote:
That contradicts units like the gram (g, kg, mg), the meter (m, cm, mm, km)
the liter/litre (l, ml), the second (sec, msec)... or at least how they are
presented in all my science texts, and...
I was referring to all the measurement units that bear the name of a scientist.
Those units all begin with a capital letter
fermi = fm (yeah, I know, a non-SI unit, but nuclear physicists never
talk about femtometers, they talk about fermis... and it just so
happens that a fermi is a femtometer.)
This explains why kilohertz is written with a small k, an exception to the
general rule that all multipliers have a capital lettere *(kHz, MHz, GHz,
THz).
...deci (d), centi (c), milli (m), nano (n), pico (p), femto (f), atto (a),
The ones you mention are not multipliers (i.e. 1,000, 1,000,000, etc,) but
sub-multipliers (i.e. 0.001, 0.000001, etc) . The general rule is that
multipliers have a capital letter, the sub-multipliers have a small letter
General rule, but there's other exceptions too: h (hecto) for 100, da
(deca) for 10. In fact the multipliers for 10, 100, and 1000 all use
lowercase letters - how's that for another general rule for ya!
Am I missing your sarcasm?
You must have missed it, because I am always quite serious and never sarcastic.
It's a little bombastic to come across setting up all sorts of rules
and then have those who work in industries point out all the
exceptions.
Tim.
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