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Physical quantity

A physical quantity is a physical property of a material or system that can be quantified by measurement. A physical quantity can be expressed as a value, which is the algebraic multiplication of a ' Numerical value ' and a ' Unit '. For example, the physical quantity of mass can be quantified as '32.3 kg ', where '32.3' is the numerical value and 'kg' is the Unit.

A physical quantity possesses at least two characteristics in common.

  1. Numerical magnitude.
  2. Units

Symbols and nomenclature

International recommendations for the use of symbols for quantities are set out in ISO/IEC 80000, the IUPAP red book and the IUPAC green book. For example, the recommended symbol for the physical quantity mass is m, and the recommended symbol for the quantity electric charge is Q.

Subscripts and indices

Subscripts are used for two reasons, to simply attach a name to the quantity or associate it with another quantity, or index a specific component (e.g., row or column).

  • Name reference: The quantity has a subscripted or superscripted single letter, group of letters, or complete word, to label what concept or entity they refer to, often to distinguish it from other quantities with the same main symbol. These subscripts or superscripts tend to be written in upright roman typeface rather than italic while the main symbol representing the quantity is in italic. For instance Ek or Ekinetic is usually used to denote kinetic energy and E p or E potential is usually used to denote potential energy.
  • Quantity reference: The quantity has a subscripted or superscripted single letter, group of letters, or complete word, to parameterize what measurement/s they refer to. These subscripts or superscripts tend to be written in italic rather than upright roman typeface; the main symbol representing the quantity is in italic. For example cp or cpressure is heat capacity at the pressure given by the quantity in the subscript.

The type of subscript is expressed by its typeface: 'k' and 'p' are abbreviations of the words kinetic and potential, whereas p (italic) is the symbol for the physical quantity pressure rather than an abbreviation of the word.

  • Indices: The use of indices is for mathematical formalism using index notation.

Size

Physical quantities can have different "sizes", as a scalar, a vector, or a tensor.

Scalars

A scalar is a physical quantity that has magnitude but no direction. Symbols for physical quantities are usually chosen to be a single letter of the Latin or Greek alphabet, and are printed in italic type.

Vectors

Vectors are physical quantities that possess both magnitude and direction and whose operations obey the axioms of a vector space. Symbols for physical quantities that are vectors are in bold type, underlined or with an arrow above. For example, if u is the speed of a particle, then the straightforward notations for its velocity are u, u, or  .

Tensors

Scalars and vectors are the simplest tensors, which can be used to describe more general physical quantities. For example, the Cauchy stress tensor possess magnitude, direction, and orientation qualities.

Numbers and elementary functions

Numerical quantities, even those denoted by letters, are usually printed in roman (upright) type, though sometimes in italic. Symbols for elementary functions (circular trigonometric, hyperbolic, logarithmic etc.), changes in a quantity like Δ in Δy or operators like d in dx, are also recommended to be printed in roman type.

Examples:

  • Real numbers, such as 1 or 2,
  • e, the base of natural logarithms,
  • i, the imaginary unit,
  • π for the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288...
  • δx, Δy, dz, representing differences (finite or otherwise) in the quantities x, y and z
  • sin α, sinh γ, log x

Units and dimensions

Units

There is often a choice of unit, though SI units (including submultiples and multiples of the basic unit) are usually used in scientific contexts due to their ease of use, international familiarity and prescription. For example, a quantity of mass might be represented by the symbol m, and could be expressed in the units kilograms (kg), pounds (lb), or daltons (Da).

Dimensions

The notion of dimension of a physical quantity was introduced by Joseph Fourier in 1822.[1] By convention, physical quantities are organized in a dimensional system built upon base quantities, each of which is regarded as having its own dimension.

Base quantities

Base quantities are those quantities which are distinct in nature and in some cases have historically not been defined in terms of other quantities. Base quantities are those quantities on the basis of which other quantities can be expressed. The seven base quantities of the International System of Quantities (ISQ) and their corresponding SI units and dimensions are listed in the following table. Other conventions may have a different number of base units (e.g. the CGS and MKS systems of units).

International System of Quantities base quantities
Quantity SI unit Dimension
symbol
Name(s) (Common) symbol(s) Name Symbol
Length, width, height, depth, distance a, b, c, d, h, l, r, s, w, x, y, z metre m L
Time t, τ second s T
Mass m kilogram kg M
Thermodynamic temperature T, θ kelvin K Θ
Amount of substance n mole mol N
Electric current i, I ampere A I
Luminous intensity Iv candela cd J
Plane angle α, β, γ, θ, φ, χ radian rad None
Solid angle ω, Ω steradian sr None

The last two angular units, plane angle and solid angle, are subsidiary units used in the SI, but are treated as dimensionless. The subsidiary units are used for convenience to differentiate between a truly dimensionless quantity (pure number) and an angle, which are different measurements.

General derived quantities

Derived quantities are those whose definitions are based on other physical quantities (base quantities).

Space

Important applied base units for space and time are below. Area and volume are thus, of course, derived from the length, but included for completeness as they occur frequently in many derived quantities, in particular densities.

Quantity SI unit Dimensions
Description Symbols
(Spatial) position (vector) r, R, a, d m L
Angular position, angle of rotation (can be treated as vector or scalar) θ, θ rad None
Area, cross-section A, S, Ω m2 L2
Vector area (Magnitude of surface area, directed normal to tangential plane of surface)   m2 L2
Volume τ, V m3 L3

Densities, flows, gradients, and moments

Important and convenient derived quantities such as densities, fluxes, flows, currents are associated with many quantities. Sometimes different terms such as current density and flux density, rate, frequency and current, are used interchangeably in the same context, sometimes they are used uniquely.

To clarify these effective template derived quantities, we let q be any quantity within some scope of context (not necessarily base quantities) and present in the table below some of the most commonly used symbols where applicable, their definitions, usage, SI units and SI dimensions – where [q] denotes the dimension of q.

For time derivatives, specific, molar, and flux densities of quantities there is no one symbol, nomenclature depends on the subject, though time derivatives can be generally written using overdot notation. For generality we use qm, qn, and F respectively. No symbol is necessarily required for the gradient of a scalar field, since only the nabla/del operator ∇ or grad needs to be written. For spatial density, current, current density and flux, the notations are common from one context to another, differing only by a change in subscripts.

For current density,   is a unit vector in the direction of flow, i.e. tangent to a flowline. Notice the dot product with the unit normal for a surface, since the amount of current passing through the surface is reduced when the current is not normal to the area. Only the current passing perpendicular to the surface contributes to the current passing through the surface, no current passes in the (tangential) plane of the surface.

The calculus notations below can be used synonymously.

If X is a n-variable function  , then

Differential The differential n-space volume element is  ,

Integral: The multiple integral of X over the n-space volume is  .
Quantity Typical symbols Definition Meaning, usage Dimension
Quantity q q Amount of a property [q]
Rate of change of quantity, Time derivative     Rate of change of property with respect to time [q]T−1
Quantity spatial density ρ = volume density (n = 3), σ = surface density (n = 2), λ = linear density (n = 1)

No common symbol for n-space density, here ρn is used.

  Amount of property per unit n-space

(length, area, volume or higher dimensions)

[q]Ln
Specific quantity qm   Amount of property per unit mass [q]M−1
Molar quantity qn   Amount of property per mole of substance [q]N−1
Quantity gradient (if q is a scalar field).   Rate of change of property with respect to position [q]L−1
Spectral quantity (for EM waves) qv, qν, qλ Two definitions are used, for frequency and wavelength:

 
 

Amount of property per unit wavelength or frequency. [q]L−1 (qλ)

[q]T (qν)

Flux, flow (synonymous) ΦF, F Two definitions are used;

Transport mechanics, nuclear physics/particle physics:
 

Vector field:
 

Flow of a property though a cross-section/surface boundary. [q]T−1L−2, [F]L2
Flux density F   Flow of a property though a cross-section/surface boundary per unit cross-section/surface area [F]
Current i, I   Rate of flow of property through a cross

section / surface boundary

[q]T−1
Current density (sometimes called flux density in transport mechanics) j, J   Rate of flow of property per unit cross-section/surface area [q]T−1L−2
Moment of quantity m, M Two definitions can be used;

q is a scalar:  
q is a vector:  

Quantity at position r has a moment about a point or axes, often relates to tendency of rotation or potential energy. [q]L

The meaning of the term physical quantity is generally well understood (everyone understands what is meant by the frequency of a periodic phenomenon, or the resistance of an electric wire). The term physical quantity does not imply a physically invariant quantity. Length for example is a physical quantity, yet it is variant under coordinate change in special and general relativity. The notion of physical quantities is so basic and intuitive in the realm of science, that it does not need to be explicitly spelled out or even mentioned. It is universally understood that scientists will (more often than not) deal with quantitative data, as opposed to qualitative data. Explicit mention and discussion of physical quantities is not part of any standard science program, and is more suited for a philosophy of science or philosophy program.

The notion of physical quantities is seldom used in physics, nor is it part of the standard physics vernacular. The idea is often misleading, as its name implies "a quantity that can be physically measured", yet is often incorrectly used to mean a physical invariant. Due to the rich complexity of physics, many different fields possess different physical invariants. There is no known physical invariant sacred in all possible fields of physics. Energy, space, momentum, torque, position, and length (just to name a few) are all found to be experimentally variant in some particular scale and system. Additionally, the notion that it is possible to measure "physical quantities" comes into question, particularly in quantum field theory and normalization techniques. As infinities are produced by the theory, the actual “measurements” made are not really those of the physical universe (as we cannot measure infinities), they are those of the renormalization scheme which is expressly dependent on our measurement scheme, coordinate system and metric system.

See also

References

  1. ^ Fourier, Joseph. Théorie analytique de la chaleur, Firmin Didot, Paris, 1822. (In this book, Fourier introduces the concept of physical dimensions for the physical quantities.)

Computer implementations

Sources

  • Cook, Alan H. The observational foundations of physics, Cambridge, 1994. ISBN 0-521-45597-9
  • Essential Principles of Physics, P.M. Whelan, M.J. Hodgson, 2nd Edition, 1978, John Murray, ISBN 0-7195-3382-1
  • Encyclopedia of Physics, R.G. Lerner, G.L. Trigg, 2nd Edition, VHC Publishers, Hans Warlimont, Springer, 2005, pp 12–13
  • Physics for Scientists and Engineers: With Modern Physics (6th Edition), P.A. Tipler, G. Mosca, W.H. Freeman and Co, 2008, 9-781429-202657

physical, quantity, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, add. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Physical quantity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A physical quantity is a physical property of a material or system that can be quantified by measurement A physical quantity can be expressed as a value which is the algebraic multiplication of a Numerical value and a Unit For example the physical quantity of mass can be quantified as 32 3 kg where 32 3 is the numerical value and kg is the Unit A physical quantity possesses at least two characteristics in common Numerical magnitude UnitsContents 1 Symbols and nomenclature 2 Subscripts and indices 3 Size 3 1 Scalars 3 2 Vectors 3 3 Tensors 4 Numbers and elementary functions 5 Units and dimensions 5 1 Units 5 2 Dimensions 6 Base quantities 7 General derived quantities 7 1 Space 7 2 Densities flows gradients and moments 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Computer implementations 10 SourcesSymbols and nomenclature EditInternational recommendations for the use of symbols for quantities are set out in ISO IEC 80000 the IUPAP red book and the IUPAC green book For example the recommended symbol for the physical quantity mass is m and the recommended symbol for the quantity electric charge is Q Subscripts and indices EditSubscripts are used for two reasons to simply attach a name to the quantity or associate it with another quantity or index a specific component e g row or column Name reference The quantity has a subscripted or superscripted single letter group of letters or complete word to label what concept or entity they refer to often to distinguish it from other quantities with the same main symbol These subscripts or superscripts tend to be written in upright roman typeface rather than italic while the main symbol representing the quantity is in italic For instance Ek or Ekinetic is usually used to denote kinetic energy and E p or E potential is usually used to denote potential energy Quantity reference The quantity has a subscripted or superscripted single letter group of letters or complete word to parameterize what measurement s they refer to These subscripts or superscripts tend to be written in italic rather than upright roman typeface the main symbol representing the quantity is in italic For example cp or cpressure is heat capacity at the pressure given by the quantity in the subscript The type of subscript is expressed by its typeface k and p are abbreviations of the words kinetic and potential whereas p italic is the symbol for the physical quantity pressure rather than an abbreviation of the word Indices The use of indices is for mathematical formalism using index notation Size EditPhysical quantities can have different sizes as a scalar a vector or a tensor Scalars Edit A scalar is a physical quantity that has magnitude but no direction Symbols for physical quantities are usually chosen to be a single letter of the Latin or Greek alphabet and are printed in italic type Vectors Edit Vectors are physical quantities that possess both magnitude and direction and whose operations obey the axioms of a vector space Symbols for physical quantities that are vectors are in bold type underlined or with an arrow above For example if u is the speed of a particle then the straightforward notations for its velocity are u u or u displaystyle vec u Tensors Edit Scalars and vectors are the simplest tensors which can be used to describe more general physical quantities For example the Cauchy stress tensor possess magnitude direction and orientation qualities Numbers and elementary functions EditNumerical quantities even those denoted by letters are usually printed in roman upright type though sometimes in italic Symbols for elementary functions circular trigonometric hyperbolic logarithmic etc changes in a quantity like D in Dy or operators like d in dx are also recommended to be printed in roman type Examples Real numbers such as 1 or 2 e the base of natural logarithms i the imaginary unit p for the ratio of a circle s circumference to its diameter 3 14159265358979323846264338327950288 dx Dy dz representing differences finite or otherwise in the quantities x y and z sin a sinh g log xUnits and dimensions EditUnits Edit Main article Units of measurementThere is often a choice of unit though SI units including submultiples and multiples of the basic unit are usually used in scientific contexts due to their ease of use international familiarity and prescription For example a quantity of mass might be represented by the symbol m and could be expressed in the units kilograms kg pounds lb or daltons Da Dimensions Edit Main article Dimension physics The notion of dimension of a physical quantity was introduced by Joseph Fourier in 1822 1 By convention physical quantities are organized in a dimensional system built upon base quantities each of which is regarded as having its own dimension Base quantities EditMain article Base quantities Base quantities are those quantities which are distinct in nature and in some cases have historically not been defined in terms of other quantities Base quantities are those quantities on the basis of which other quantities can be expressed The seven base quantities of the International System of Quantities ISQ and their corresponding SI units and dimensions are listed in the following table Other conventions may have a different number of base units e g the CGS and MKS systems of units International System of Quantities base quantities Quantity SI unit DimensionsymbolName s Common symbol s Name SymbolLength width height depth distance a b c d h l r s w x y z metre m LTime t t second s TMass m kilogram kg MThermodynamic temperature T 8 kelvin K 8Amount of substance n mole mol NElectric current i I ampere A ILuminous intensity Iv candela cd JPlane angle a b g 8 f x radian rad NoneSolid angle w W steradian sr NoneThe last two angular units plane angle and solid angle are subsidiary units used in the SI but are treated as dimensionless The subsidiary units are used for convenience to differentiate between a truly dimensionless quantity pure number and an angle which are different measurements General derived quantities EditDerived quantities are those whose definitions are based on other physical quantities base quantities Space Edit Important applied base units for space and time are below Area and volume are thus of course derived from the length but included for completeness as they occur frequently in many derived quantities in particular densities Quantity SI unit DimensionsDescription Symbols Spatial position vector r R a d m LAngular position angle of rotation can be treated as vector or scalar 8 8 rad NoneArea cross section A S W m2 L2Vector area Magnitude of surface area directed normal to tangential plane of surface A A n S S n displaystyle mathbf A equiv A mathbf hat n quad mathbf S equiv S mathbf hat n m2 L2Volume t V m3 L3Densities flows gradients and moments Edit Important and convenient derived quantities such as densities fluxes flows currents are associated with many quantities Sometimes different terms such as current density and flux density rate frequency and current are used interchangeably in the same context sometimes they are used uniquely To clarify these effective template derived quantities we let q be any quantity within some scope of context not necessarily base quantities and present in the table below some of the most commonly used symbols where applicable their definitions usage SI units and SI dimensions where q denotes the dimension of q For time derivatives specific molar and flux densities of quantities there is no one symbol nomenclature depends on the subject though time derivatives can be generally written using overdot notation For generality we use qm qn and F respectively No symbol is necessarily required for the gradient of a scalar field since only the nabla del operator or grad needs to be written For spatial density current current density and flux the notations are common from one context to another differing only by a change in subscripts For current density t displaystyle mathbf hat t is a unit vector in the direction of flow i e tangent to a flowline Notice the dot product with the unit normal for a surface since the amount of current passing through the surface is reduced when the current is not normal to the area Only the current passing perpendicular to the surface contributes to the current passing through the surface no current passes in the tangential plane of the surface The calculus notations below can be used synonymously If X is a n variable function X X x 1 x 2 x n displaystyle X equiv X left x 1 x 2 cdots x n right thenDifferential The differential n space volume element is d n x d V n d x 1 d x 2 d x n displaystyle mathrm d n x equiv mathrm d V n equiv mathrm d x 1 mathrm d x 2 cdots mathrm d x n Integral The multiple integral of X over the n space volume is X d n x X d V n X d x 1 d x 2 d x n displaystyle int X mathrm d n x equiv int X mathrm d V n equiv int cdots int int X mathrm d x 1 mathrm d x 2 cdots mathrm d x n Quantity Typical symbols Definition Meaning usage DimensionQuantity q q Amount of a property q Rate of change of quantity Time derivative q displaystyle dot q q d q d t displaystyle dot q equiv frac mathrm d q mathrm d t Rate of change of property with respect to time q T 1Quantity spatial density r volume density n 3 s surface density n 2 l linear density n 1 No common symbol for n space density here rn is used q r n d V n displaystyle q int rho n mathrm d V n Amount of property per unit n space length area volume or higher dimensions q L nSpecific quantity qm q m d q d m displaystyle q m frac mathrm d q mathrm d m Amount of property per unit mass q M 1Molar quantity qn q n d q d n displaystyle q n frac mathrm d q mathrm d n Amount of property per mole of substance q N 1Quantity gradient if q is a scalar field q displaystyle nabla q Rate of change of property with respect to position q L 1Spectral quantity for EM waves qv qn ql Two definitions are used for frequency and wavelength q q l d l displaystyle q int q lambda mathrm d lambda q q n d n displaystyle q int q nu mathrm d nu Amount of property per unit wavelength or frequency q L 1 ql q T qn Flux flow synonymous FF F Two definitions are used Transport mechanics nuclear physics particle physics q F d A d t displaystyle q iiint F mathrm d A mathrm d t Vector field F F S F d A displaystyle Phi F iint S mathbf F cdot mathrm d mathbf A Flow of a property though a cross section surface boundary q T 1L 2 F L2Flux density F F n d F F d A displaystyle mathbf F cdot mathbf hat n frac mathrm d Phi F mathrm d A Flow of a property though a cross section surface boundary per unit cross section surface area F Current i I I d q d t displaystyle I frac mathrm d q mathrm d t Rate of flow of property through a cross section surface boundary q T 1Current density sometimes called flux density in transport mechanics j J I J d S displaystyle I iint mathbf J cdot mathrm d mathbf S Rate of flow of property per unit cross section surface area q T 1L 2Moment of quantity m M Two definitions can be used q is a scalar m r q displaystyle mathbf m mathbf r q q is a vector m r q displaystyle mathbf m mathbf r times mathbf q Quantity at position r has a moment about a point or axes often relates to tendency of rotation or potential energy q LThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The meaning of the term physical quantity is generally well understood everyone understands what is meant by the frequency of a periodic phenomenon or the resistance of an electric wire The term physical quantity does not imply a physically invariant quantity Length for example is a physical quantity yet it is variant under coordinate change in special and general relativity The notion of physical quantities is so basic and intuitive in the realm of science that it does not need to be explicitly spelled out or even mentioned It is universally understood that scientists will more often than not deal with quantitative data as opposed to qualitative data Explicit mention and discussion of physical quantities is not part of any standard science program and is more suited for a philosophy of science or philosophy program The notion of physical quantities is seldom used in physics nor is it part of the standard physics vernacular The idea is often misleading as its name implies a quantity that can be physically measured yet is often incorrectly used to mean a physical invariant Due to the rich complexity of physics many different fields possess different physical invariants There is no known physical invariant sacred in all possible fields of physics Energy space momentum torque position and length just to name a few are all found to be experimentally variant in some particular scale and system Additionally the notion that it is possible to measure physical quantities comes into question particularly in quantum field theory and normalization techniques As infinities are produced by the theory the actual measurements made are not really those of the physical universe as we cannot measure infinities they are those of the renormalization scheme which is expressly dependent on our measurement scheme coordinate system and metric system See also EditList of physical quantities Philosophy of science Quantity Observable quantity Specific quantityReferences Edit Fourier Joseph Theorie analytique de la chaleur Firmin Didot Paris 1822 In this book Fourier introduces the concept of physical dimensions for the physical quantities Computer implementations Edit DEVLIB project in C Language and Delphi Language Physical Quantities project in C Language at Code Plex Physical Measure C library project in C Language at Code Plex Ethical Measures project in C Language at Code Plex Engineer JS online calculation and scripting tool supporting physical quantities Sources EditCook Alan H The observational foundations of physics Cambridge 1994 ISBN 0 521 45597 9 Essential Principles of Physics P M Whelan M J Hodgson 2nd Edition 1978 John Murray ISBN 0 7195 3382 1 Encyclopedia of Physics R G Lerner G L Trigg 2nd Edition VHC Publishers Hans Warlimont Springer 2005 pp 12 13 Physics for Scientists and Engineers With Modern Physics 6th Edition P A Tipler G Mosca W H Freeman and Co 2008 9 781429 202657 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Physical quantity amp oldid 1131784998, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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