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SI prefix

An SI prefix is a prefix which can be appplied to any unit of the International System of Units (SI) to to give subdivisions and multiples of that unit.

For example, the prefix "kilo" multiplies by one thousand, so a kilometre is 1,000 metres, and a kilowatt is 1,000 watts. The prefix "milli" subdivides by a thousand, so a millimetre is one thousandth of a metre (1,000 millimetres in a metre), and a millilitre is one thousandth of a litre. The way that the same prefixes can be applied to any SI unit is one of the strengths of SI, since it considerable simplifies the learning and use of it.

The most commonly used are:

Giga = 109, US billion or European milliard, a thousand million
Mega = million
kilo = thousand
centi = one hundredth
milli = one thousandth

The full table follows below.

(Sub)multiplePrefixSymbolName (Americas)Name (European)
1024[?]yottaYSeptillionQuadrillion
1021[?]zettaZSextillionThousand trillion (Trilliard)
1018[?]exaEQuintillionTrillion
1015[?]petaPQuadrillionThousand billion (Billiard[?])
1012[?]teraTTrillionBillion
109[?]gigaGBillionThousand million (Milliard)
106[?]megaMMillion
103[?]kilokThousand
102[?]hectohHundred
101[?]deca or dekadaTen
10-1[?]decidTenth
10-2[?]centicHundredth
10-3[?]millimThousandth
10-6[?]microμMillionth
10-9[?]nanonBillionthMilliardth
10-12[?]picopTrillionthBillionth
10-15[?]femtofQuadrillionthBilliardth
10-18[?]attoaQuintillionthTrillionth
10-21[?]zeptozSextillionthTrilliardth
10-24[?]yoctoySeptillionthQuadrillionth

Examples:

The prefix always takes precedence over any exponentiation; thus km2 means square kilometre and not kilo - square metre. For example, 3 km2 is equal to 3,000,000 m2 and not to 3,000 m2 (nor to 9,000,000 m2).

Prefixes where the exponent is divisible by three are recommended. Hence '100 metres' rather than 'one hectometre'. Notable exceptions include centimetre, hectare (hecto-are), centilitre, and 1 dm3 (equivalent to one litre).

The accepted pronunciation of the initial G of "giga-" was once soft, /jī'gə/ (like "gigantic"), but now the hard pronunciation, /gig'ə/, is probably more common. [Is this true of Commonwealth countries?]

Note that the formal SI metric prefix for 1000 is lower case "k"; some use this strictly, reserving "K" for multiplication by 1024 (KB is thus "kilobytes").

Use outside SI

The abbreviation "k" is often used to mean a multiple of a thousand, so one may talk of "a 40K salary" (40,000), or the Y2K problem.

Non-SI units

SI prefixes are rarely used with imperial units except in some specialised cases (e.g. megaton). They are often used with cgs units in situations where these are still found (e.g. millitorr). They are also used with "natural" units in some fields (e.g. megaelectron volt, gigaparsec).

Computing

k, M and G are common in computing, where they are applied to information and storage units like the bit and the byte. Since these come in powers of two, the prefixes tend to be used differently:

K = 210 = 1,024
M = 220 = 1,048,576
G = 230 = 1,073,741,824
T = 240 = 1,099,511,627,776
P = 250 = 1,125,899,906,842,624.

However, these prefixes retain their powers-of-1000 meanings when used to describe rates of data communication: 10-Mbps Ethernet runs at 10,000,000 bits per second, not 10,485,760 bits per second.

This inconsistency was not relevant when computers had little storage and communication links were relatively slow, but the increasing capacity of computing systems and speed of network links began making this inconsistency a more serious problem.

Thus, new binary prefixes have recently been adopted by the International Electrotechnical Commission, formed from the first syllable of the decimal prefix plus 'bi' (pronounced 'bee'). The symbol is the decimal symbol plus 'i'. So now, one kilobyte (1 kB) is 1000 bytes, whereas one kibibyte (1 KiB) is 210 = 1024 bytes. Likewise mebi (220), gibi (230), tebi (240), pebi (250), and exbi (260). For example, at 1 MB/s = 106 bytes per second, it would take slightly longer than one second to transfer an object 1 MiB = 220 bytes in size.

For more information on these power-of-two prefixes, see Binary prefixes.

See also Orders of magnitude.


Britain, Ireland and Australia previously used the European number name conventions, but have now largely switched to US usage. Note in particular that above a million and below a millionth, the same name has different values in the two naming systems, so billion and trillion (for example) are unfortunately potentially ambiguous terms internationally. Using the SI prefixes can circumvent this problem. See number names for the details.

This article (or an earlier version of it) contains material from FOLDOC, used with permission.

Glasglow.com

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