HOME WEB NEWS IMAGES CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGESPOLLS - SURVEYS WIKI COUNTRIES PHOTOS US UK INDIA
Avoo.com provides meta search results from various sources

Centimeter


Google


News, World News by www.WorldOfNews.com
 New Type of Particle May Have Been Found - Slashdot 
 Shard find in Philippines shows an ancient form of writing - aniin.com 
 Researchers Test Drive Bus With Automated Steering - Slashdot 
 Analysis Begins on Deepest Soil Sample - SKYcontrol 
 TUCSON, Ariz. The next sample of Martian soil being grabbed for analysis is coming from a trench about three times deeper than any other trench NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander has dug. - SKYcontrol 
 Does Size Matter - YouTube 
 Now, a speedometer for determining the velocities of stars - aniin.com 
 NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander abandons underground salt search - aniin.com 
 Rajasthan's Sambhar salt lake may soon cease to exist - aniin.com 
 Scientists puzzled by water vapor mystery on Mars - aniin.com 
More >>


1 centimetre =
SI units
10×10−3 m 10 mm
US customary / Imperial units
32.81×10−3 ft 0.3937 in

A carpenters\' ruler with centimetre divisions

A centimetre (American spelling: centimeter, symbol cm) is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one hundredth of a metre, which is the current SI base unit of length. Centi is the SI prefix for a factor of 10^{-2}.http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter3/prefixes.html Hence a centimetre can be written as 10×10^{-3} m (engineering notation) or 1 E-2 m (scientific E notation) — meaning 10 × 1 mm or 1 m / 100 respectively. The centimetre is the base unit of length in the now deprecated centimetre-gram-second system of units.

Though for many physical quantities, SI prefixes for factors of 103 - like milli and kilo - are often preferred by technicians, the centimetre remains a practical unit of length for many everyday measurements. A centimetre is approximately the width of the fingernail of an adult person.

Contents

Equivalence to other units of length

1 centimetre is equal to:

1 cubic centimetre is equal to 1 millilitre, under the current SI system of units.

Uses of centimetre

In addition to its use in the measurement of length, the centimeter is used:

Unicode symbols

For the purposes of compatibility with Chinese, Japanese and Korean (CJK) characters, Unicode has symbols for: [1] CJK Compatibility excerpt from The Unicode Standard, Version 4.1.

  • centimetre (cm) - code 339D
  • square centimetre (㎠) - code 33A0
  • cubic centimetre (㎤) - code 33A4

They are useful only with East Asian fixed-width CJK fonts, because they are equal in size to one Chinese character.

See also

References

External links


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


Advertise with Us | Search Marketing | Help | Suggest a Site | Privacy Policy
© 2008 www.avoo.com. All rights reserved.