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On the Use of Dimensional Equations in Physics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2009

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Though every quantity, whatever be its nature, has magnitude, no quantity can be said to be large or small absolutely. When we speak of the size of any body we mean its size relatively to the size of some other body with which we compare it. A yard is large if we compare it with an inch; it is small when compared with a mile. In the former case the number which represents it is more than 60,000 times larger than the number by which it is represented in the latter case. A mere number is therefore useless as regards the statement of magnitude, except when accompanied by a clear indication of what the thing measured is compared with. The quantity in terms of which the comparison is made is called the unit, and the number which tells how often this unit is contained in a given quantity is called the numeric of that quantity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Edinburgh Mathematical Society 1890