Units of Measurement Wiki
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17 April 2024

N    20:11  Zeptosecond diffhist +176 Wappitysmap talk contribs (Created page with "A Zeptosecond is 10^-21 second (1 sextillonth) the shortest recorded time is 247 Zeptoseconds Is the time for a single particle of light to pass through a molecule of hydrogen.") Tag: Source edit

15 April 2024

     20:36  Inch (United States customary) diffhist +4 174.178.66.56 contribs Tag: Visual edit
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20:25 (cur | prev) +62 174.178.66.56 contribs ((Bum bum bum, badum-badum) A duck walked up to a lemonade stand And he said to the man, runnin' the stand "Hey! (Bum bum bum) Got any grapes?" The man said, "No, we just sell lemonade. But it's cold and it's fresh and it's all home-made. Can I get you a glass?" The duck said, "I'll pass." Then he waddled away (Waddle waddle waddle) 'Til the very next day (Bum bum bum bum ba-bada-dum) When the duck walked up to the lemonade stand And he said to the man, runnin' the stand "Hey! (Bum bum bum) Got a) Tag: Visual edit

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Featured article

This page describes an obsolete unit.

The unit described on this page was in use prior to modern methods of precision measurement. It was based on a standard which is no longer available, and which is not capable of being calibrated against modern measurement units. Therefore, the equivalence to modern SI units or to current United States customary units can only be considered approximate.



Ancient Greece consisted of a number of city-states, each with its own set of measurement standards. The most important of these city-states, Athens, eventially came to have dominion over much of the area, so that the Attic Greek units of length or distance (as well as their units of measurement for other quantities) became standard for a large region, and this page tabulates those Attic Greek units.

Although the Greek units of measuring lengths and distances were well-defined and their relationships to each other are well known, no actual Ancient Greek (Attic or other) standards are definitively known by the present day, so that the only way of determining the length of any Attic Greek unit would be to measure something in modern terms whose length was given by the Greeks in their units. And because this procedure does not give us any clue to which unit may have been the base unit and which were subsidiary units, this distinction really does not apply to the Attic Greek units here given, so all the units really have equal status. However, such measurements have been made, and they indicate (though requiring statistical treatment to allow for the inaccuracies of the Greeks' own measurements) that the best estimate of the Attic Greek pous (foot) can be taken as 0.30856 m = 1.0123 ft = 0.3374 yd [1], and this distance will be adopted on this wiki as the basis for interpreting all other Attic Greek units of length or distance, as their relation to the mile is known.

Name of unit Value in terms of smaller units Value in terms of the meter Value in terms of United States customary measure
daktylos 0.019285 0.7593 in.
condylos 2 daktyloi 0.03857 1.5185 in. = 0.1265 ft
palestra 2 condyloi 0.07714 3.037 in. = 0.2531 ft
dichas 2 palestrai 0.15428 6.074 in. = 0.5062 ft
spithane 1½ dichai 0.23142 9.111 in. = 0.7593 ft
pous 1⅓ spithanes 0.30856 1.0123 ft = 0.3374 yd
cubit 2 podoi 0.61712 2.0247 ft = 0.6749 yd
bema 1¼ cubits 0.7714 2.5308 ft = 0.8436 yd
orguia 22/5 bemata 1.85136 2.0247 yd = 0.0012 mi
akaina 1½ orguiai 2.77704 3.037 yd = 0.0017 mi
amma 6⅔ akainai 18.5136 20.2467 yd = 0.0115 mi
plethron 1⅔ ammai 30.856 33.7445 yd = 0.0192 mi
stadion 6 plethra 185.136 202.4672 yd = 0.115 mi
mile 7½ stadia 1388.52 1518.5039 yd = 0.8628 mi

References

  1. Cardarelli, François (1998). Scientific Unit Conversion. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-76022-9.