Comment by mxuribe

1 day ago

Aaahhh, ok, thanks!

You had the right idea. Angstroms are not an SI unit. The SI units jump by three orders of magnitude at this scale: picometer, nanometer, micrometer, millimeter.

(In the same way that meter jumps three orders of magnitude to kilometer[1], or millions to billions to trillions, etc.)

[1] Technically there are intermediate SI units between meter and km but nobody uses them. There are not intermediate SI units between the tiny ones.

  • Why above 1mm do we go by tens instead of thousands?

    We have centimeter (10 mm) then decimeter (100mm) then meter (1000mm). Then we jump to thousand again (kilometer).

    • Answer that question and you'll get the whole impetus for logarithmic scales.

    • >We have centimeter (10 mm) then decimeter (100mm)

      Does anyone actually use those? I think I would throw up a little in my mouth if I saw either of those on a mechanical drawing.

      2 replies →

    • Everyday necessity. The gap between mm and m is too large, there are many things in daily life that are better expressed in cm. SI units must strike a balance between three factors: not having so many denominations nobody can remember them; not having so few denominations that using them adds too much wordiness to daily life (150mm or 0.15m are wordier than 15cm); and a degree of familiarity with the everyday units people used before metric, to smooth the transition and encourage adoption.