Definitions [13]
Define Standard metre.
The standard metre is defined in terms of the speed of light, according to which one metre is the distance travelled by light in `1/(299,792,458)` of a second in the air (or vacuum).
Define mass.
The quantity of matter contained in a body is known as its mass.
Mass is the measure of the amount of matter in an object.
State or define the following term:
An hour
It is defined as 1/24 the part of the mean solar day.
State or define the following term:
Mean solar day
The average of the varying solar days, when the earth completes one revolution around the sun, is called mean solar day.
State or define the following term:
Minute
It is defined as the 1/1440 part of the mean solar day.
State or define the following term:
Year
One year is defined as the time in which earth completes one complete revolution around the sun.
Define measurement.
Measurement is the process of comparison of the given physical quantity with the known standard quantity of the same nature.
Define standard meter.
A standard metreis equal to 1650763.73 wavelengths in vacuum, of the radiation from krypton isotope of mass 86.
Define a fundamental quantity.
The physical quantities like mass, length and time which do not depend on each other are known as fundamental quantities.
State or define the following term:
Solar day
The time taken by the earth to complete one rotation about its own axis is called solar day.
State or define the following term:
Second
“A second is defined as 1/86400 the part of a mean solar day.”
OR
Second may also be defined “as to be equal to the duration of9,192,631,770 vibrations corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of cesium – 133 atoms in the ground state.”
Define mass.
Mass is the measure of the amount of matter in an object. It is a fundamental property of matter and does not change with location or the object’s state.
Define one kilogram, the S.I. unit of mass.
One kilogram (kg) is the S.I. unit of mass. It is defined as the mass of the international prototype of the kilogram, which is a platinum-iridium alloy cylinder stored at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in France.
