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Unit

A unit is a standard quantity used to express measurements of physical quantities. A numerical value without a unit is meaningless for conveying a measurement, and the unit provides a precise reference for comparison, calculation, and communication.

In the International System of Units (SI), seven base units define all other quantities: the meter for

The SI is standardized by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) and implemented worldwide by

Not all units are SI; customary or historical units such as foot, inch, liter, or hour continue

Beyond measurement, the word unit also denotes a single component of a larger system, such as a

length,
the
kilogram
for
mass,
the
second
for
time,
the
ampere
for
electric
current,
the
kelvin
for
temperature,
the
mole
for
amount
of
substance,
and
the
candela
for
luminous
intensity.
Derived
units
are
formed
from
these
base
units,
such
as
the
newton
for
force,
the
joule
for
energy,
and
the
watt
for
power.
Many
common
quantities
use
combinations
of
base
units
with
SI
prefixes
(kilo-,
milli-,
micro-,
etc.)
to
scale
measurements
up
or
down.
the
International
Bureau
of
Weights
and
Measures
(BIPM).
SI
prefixes
provide
a
convenient
means
to
express
large
or
small
values,
and
a
coherent
system
aims
to
relate
derived
units
directly
to
base
units
without
additional
conversion
factors.
to
be
used
in
various
contexts.
Unit
conversion
enables
translation
between
systems,
and
dimensional
analysis
uses
units
to
check
the
consistency
of
equations.
In
SI
practice,
radians
and
steradians
are
treated
as
dimensionless
for
most
calculations,
though
they
are
designated
as
units
of
angle.
military
unit
or
housing
unit.
In
measurement
contexts,
clearly
specifying
the
unit
is
essential
for
clarity
and
accuracy.