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215 lines
11 KiB
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.. default-role:: term
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Glossary
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========
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ISO 80000 [1]_ definitions
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--------------------------
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.. glossary::
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quantity
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- Property of a phenomenon, body, or substance, where the property has a magnitude that can
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be expressed by means of a number and a reference.
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- A reference can be a measurement unit, a measurement procedure, a reference material, or
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a combination of such.
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- A quantity as defined here is a scalar. However, a vector or a tensor, the components of
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which are quantities, is also considered to be a quantity.
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- The concept ’quantity’ may be generically divided into, e.g. ‘physical quantity’,
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‘chemical quantity’, and ‘biological quantity’, or ‘base quantity’ and ‘derived quantity’.
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- Examples of quantities are: mass, length, density, magnetic field strength, etc.
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kind of quantity
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kind
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- Aspect common to mutually comparable `quantities <quantity>`.
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- The division of the concept ‘quantity’ into several kinds is to some extent arbitrary
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- i.e. the quantities diameter, circumference, and wavelength are generally considered
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to be quantities of the same kind, namely, of the kind of quantity called length.
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- Quantities of the same kind within a given `system of quantities` have the same quantity
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`dimension`. However, `quantities <quantity>` of the same `dimension` are not necessarily
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of the same kind.
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- For example, the absorbed dose and the dose equivalent have the same `dimension`.
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However, the former measures the absolute amount of radiation one receives whereas
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the latter is a weighted measurement taking into account the kind of radiation
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on was exposed to.
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system of quantities
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system
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- Set of `quantities <quantity>` together with a set of non-contradictory equations
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relating those `quantities <quantity>`.
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- Examples of systems of quantities are: the International System of Quantities,
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the Imperial System, etc.
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base quantity
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- `Quantity` in a conventionally chosen subset of a given `system of quantities`, where
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no `quantity` in the subset can be expressed in terms of the other `quantities <quantity>`
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within that subset.
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- Base quantities are referred to as being mutually independent since a base quantity
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cannot be expressed as a product of powers of the other base quantities.
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derived quantity
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- `Quantity`, in a `system of quantities`, defined in terms of the base quantities of
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that system.
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International System of Quantities
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ISQ
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- `System of quantities` based on the seven `base quantities <base quantity>`:
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length, mass, time, electric current, thermodynamic temperature, amount of substance,
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and luminous intensity.
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- The International System of Units (SI) is based on the ISQ.
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dimension of a quantity
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quantity dimension
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dimension
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- Expression of the dependence of a `quantity` on the `base quantities <base quantity>`
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of a `system of quantities` as a product of powers of factors corresponding to the
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`base quantities <base quantity>`, omitting any numerical factors.
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- A power of a factor is the factor raised to an exponent. Each factor is the dimension
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of a `base quantity`.
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- In deriving the dimension of a quantity, no account is taken of its scalar, vector, or
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tensor character.
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- In a given `system of quantities`:
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- `quantities <quantity>` of the same `kind` have the same quantity dimension,
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- `quantities <quantity>` of different quantity dimensions are always of different `kinds <kind>`,
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- `quantities <quantity>` having the same quantity dimension are not necessarily of the same `kind`.
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quantity of dimension one
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dimensionless quantity
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- `quantity` for which all the exponents of the factors corresponding to the
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`base quantities <base quantity>` in its `quantity dimension` are zero.
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- The term “dimensionless quantity” is commonly used and is kept here for historical
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reasons. It stems from the fact that all exponents are zero in the symbolic
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representation of the `dimension` for such `quantities <quantity>`. The term “quantity
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of dimension one” reflects the convention in which the symbolic representation of the
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`dimension` for such `quantities <quantity>` is the symbol ``1``. This `dimension` is
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not a number, but the neutral element for multiplication of `dimensions <dimension>`.
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- The `measurement units <measurement unit>` and values of quantities of dimension one
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are numbers, but such `quantities <quantity>` convey more information than a number.
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- Some quantities of dimension one are defined as the ratios of two
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`quantities of the same kind <kind>`. The `coherent derived unit` is the number one,
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symbol ``1``.
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- Numbers of entities are quantities of dimension one.
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unit of measurement
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measurement unit
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unit
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- Real scalar `quantity`, defined and adopted by convention, with which any other
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`quantity of the same kind <kind>` can be compared to express the ratio of the
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second `quantity` to the first one as a number.
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- Measurement units are designated by conventionally assigned names and symbols.
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- Measurement units of `quantities <quantity>` of the same `quantity dimension` may
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be designated by the same name and symbol even when the `quantities <quantity>` are
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not of the same `kind`.
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For example, joule per kelvin and J/K are respectively the name and symbol of both a
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measurement unit of heat capacity and a measurement unit of entropy, which are generally
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not considered to be `quantities of the same kind <kind>`. However, in some cases special
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measurement unit names are restricted to be used with `quantities <quantity>` of specific
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`kind` only. For example, the measurement unit ‘second to the power minus one’ (``1/s``) is
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called hertz (``Hz``) when used for frequencies and becquerel (``Bq``) when used for
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activities of radionuclides. As another example, the joule (``J``) is used as a unit of
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energy, but never as a unit of moment of force, i.e. the newton metre (``N · m``).
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- Measurement units of `quantities of dimension one <quantity of dimension one>` are
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numbers. In some cases, these measurement units are given special names, e.g. radian,
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steradian, and decibel, or are expressed by quotients such as millimole per mole equal
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to :math:`10^{−3}` and microgram per kilogram equal to :math:`10^{−9}`.
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base unit
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- Measurement unit that is adopted by convention for a `base quantity`.
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- In each `coherent system of units`, there is only one base unit for each `base quantity`.
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- A base unit may also serve for a `derived quantity` of the same `quantity dimension`.
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- For example, the `ISQ` has the base units of: metre, kilogram, second, Ampere, Kelvin, mole,
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and candela.
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derived unit
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- Measurement unit for a `derived quantity`.
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- For example, in the `ISQ` Newton, Pascal, and katal are derived units.
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coherent derived unit
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- `Derived unit` that, for a given `system of quantities` and for a chosen set of
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`base units <base unit>`, is a product of powers of `base units <base unit>` with no
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other proportionality factor than one.
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- A power of a `base unit` is the `base unit` raised to an exponent.
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- Coherence can be determined only with respect to a particular `system of quantities`
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and a given set of `base units <base unit>`. That is, if the metre and the second are
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base units, the metre per second is the coherent derived unit of velocity.
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system of units
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- Set of `base units <base unit>` and `derived units <derived unit>`, together with
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their multiples and submultiples, defined in accordance with given rules, for a given
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`system of quantities`.
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coherent system of units
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- `System of units`, based on a given `system of quantities`, in which the measurement
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unit for each `derived quantity` is a `coherent derived unit`.
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- A `system of units` can be coherent only with respect to a `system of quantities` and
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the adopted `base units <base unit>`.
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off-system measurement unit
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off-system unit
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- `Measurement unit` that does not belong to a given `system of units`. For example, the
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electronvolt (:math:`≈ 1,602 18 × 10^{–19} J`) is an off-system measurement unit of energy with
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respect to the `SI` or day, hour, minute are off-system measurement units of time with
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respect to the `SI`.
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International System of Units
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SI
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- `System of units`, based on the `International System of Quantities`, their names and
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symbols, including a series of prefixes and their names and symbols, together with rules
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for their use, adopted by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM)
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quantity value
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value of a quantity
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value
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- Number and reference together expressing magnitude of a `quantity`.
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- A quantity value can be presented in more than one way.
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Other definitions
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-----------------
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.. glossary::
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:sorted:
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base dimension
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- A `dimension` of a `base quantity`.
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derived dimension
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- A `dimension` of a `derived quantity`.
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- Often implemented as a list of exponents of `base dimensions <base dimension>`.
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normalized derived dimension
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A `derived dimension` in which:
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- `base dimensions <base dimension>` are not repeated in a list (each base dimension is provided at most once),
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- `base dimensions <base dimension>` are consistently ordered,
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- `base dimensions <base dimension>` having zero exponent are elided.
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derived dimension recipe
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recipe
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- The ordered list of exponents used to define a derived dimension
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- The list may contain both base and derived dimensions (in the latter case
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the dimension is being extracted to base dimensions by the framework)
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- The order and types of dimensions used in the recipe determine how an unnamed
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dimension's unit symbol is being printed in the text output
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scalar
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- Not a `quantity`
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- Can be passed as a representation type to the :class:`units::quantity` type or be used as a factor
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while multiplying or dividing a `quantity`.
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.. rubric:: Footnotes:
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.. [1] **ISO 80000-1:2009(E) "Quantities and units — Part 1: General"** gives general information
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and definitions concerning quantities, systems of quantities, units, quantity and unit symbols,
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and coherent unit systems, especially the International System of Quantities, ISQ, and the
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International System of Units, SI. The principles laid down in ISO 80000-1:2009 are intended
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for general use within the various fields of science and technology and as an introduction to
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other parts of the Quantities and units series. Ordinal quantities and nominal properties are
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outside the scope of ISO 80000-1:2009.
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