CLASS 11 PHYSICS • UNITS AND MEASUREMENTS

Physical Quantities and SI Units

Premium notes on physical quantities, SI units, base and derived units, prefixes, scientific notation, order of magnitude, unit conversion, numericals and PYQs.

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1. Physical Quantities

A physical quantity is any measurable property of a body or phenomenon. A complete measurement has a numerical value and a unit, such as 5 m, 2 kg or 10 s.

Characteristics

  • It must be measurable.
  • It has magnitude.
  • It is expressed with a unit.
  • It may be scalar or vector.

Scalar Quantities

Scalars have magnitude only. Examples: mass, time, temperature, distance, speed and energy.

Vector Quantities

Vectors have magnitude and direction. Examples: displacement, velocity, acceleration, force and momentum.

Physical QuantityNumerical ValueUnit5 m

Examples Table

ExampleMeasurementType
Length of table2 mScalar
Velocity of car20 m s-1 eastVector
Mass of book0.5 kgScalar
Force on box10 N rightVector

2. Fundamental Quantities

Fundamental quantities are independent physical quantities that cannot be expressed in terms of other quantities. SI has seven base quantities.

QuantitySI UnitSymbolBrief Explanation
LengthmetremDistance between two points; used in displacement, height and wavelength.
MasskilogramkgAmount of matter; base unit includes prefix kilo by historical convention.
TimesecondsDuration of events; essential in motion and oscillations.
Electric CurrentampereARate of flow of electric charge.
TemperaturekelvinKThermodynamic temperature scale.
Amount of SubstancemolemolAmount containing Avogadro number of entities.
Luminous IntensitycandelacdIntensity of visible light in a given direction.

3. Derived Quantities

Derived quantities are formed by combining fundamental quantities through multiplication, division or powers.

Derived QuantityFormationSI Unit
Arealength × breadthm2
Volumelength × breadth × heightm3
Velocitydisplacement / timem s-1
Accelerationchange in velocity / timem s-2
Momentummass × velocitykg m s-1
Forcemass × accelerationkg m s-2 or N
Work / Energyforce × displacementkg m2 s-2 or J
Powerwork / timekg m2 s-3 or W
Pressureforce / areakg m-1 s-2 or Pa
Densitymass / volumekg m-3

4. SI System

History

The SI system developed from the metric system and is maintained internationally for uniform scientific communication.

Advantages

It is decimal, coherent, internationally accepted and easy for conversion using prefixes.

Need

Standardization prevents confusion in experiments, trade, engineering and scientific research.

Metric SystemSI SystemInternational Standard

5. Base Units

The seven SI base units form the foundation of all derived units.

QuantityUnitSymbol
Lengthmetrem
Masskilogramkg
Timeseconds
Electric CurrentampereA
TemperaturekelvinK
Amount of Substancemolemol
Luminous Intensitycandelacd
Exam Tip: Symbols are case-sensitive. kg, m, s, A, K, mol and cd must be written correctly.

6. Supplementary Units

Radian and steradian were historically called supplementary units. In the modern SI, they are treated as dimensionless derived units.

Radian

Radian measures plane angle. θ = arc length / radius.

θ rad

Steradian

Steradian measures solid angle in three-dimensional space.

solid angle Ω

7. SI Prefixes

SI prefixes express very large and very small quantities compactly.

PrefixSymbolPower of 10
yottaY1024
zettaZ1021
exaE1018
petaP1015
teraT1012
gigaG109
megaM106
kilok103
hectoh102
decada101
decid10-1
centic10-2
millim10-3
microμ10-6
nanon10-9
picop10-12
femtof10-15
attoa10-18
zeptoz10-21
yoctoy10-24
Memory idea: learn powers in steps of 3: kilo 103, mega 106, giga 109; milli 10-3, micro 10-6, nano 10-9.

8. Scientific Notation

Scientific notation writes a number as a × 10n, where 1 ≤ a < 10 and n is an integer.

Large Number

300000000 m s-1 = 3.00 × 108 m s-1

Small Number

0.000001 m = 1 × 10-6 m

Rule

Move decimal to make one non-zero digit before decimal, then count moves as power of 10.

Use

It simplifies calculations involving atomic and astronomical quantities.

9. Order of Magnitude

Order of magnitude is the nearest power of 10 that estimates a quantity.

QuantityApproximate ValueOrder of Magnitude
Radius of Earth6.4 × 106 m107 m
Speed of Light3.00 × 108 m s-1108 m s-1
Mass of Electron9.1 × 10-31 kg10-30 kg
Size of Atom1 × 10-10 m10-10 m

10. Unit Conversion

Unit conversion uses conversion factors without changing the physical quantity.

ConversionEquivalentMethod
1 km1000 mmultiply by 103
1 cm10-2 mmultiply by 10-2
1 hour3600 smultiply by 3600
1 g10-3 kgmultiply by 10-3
1 eV1.6 × 10-19 Jmultiply by 1.6 × 10-19

11. Important Tables

Physical Constants

ConstantSymbolValue
Speed of lightc3.00 × 108 m s-1
Planck constanth6.63 × 10-34 J s
Electronic chargee1.6 × 10-19 C
Avogadro constantNA6.022 × 1023 mol-1

Quick Unit Conversion

ConversionFactor
km to m× 103
m to cm× 102
kg to g× 103
minute to second× 60

12. Solved Numericals

CBSE Numerical

Question: Convert 2.5 km into metre.

Given: 2.5 km

Formula: 1 km = 1000 m

Substitution: 2.5 × 1000

Calculation: 2500 m

Final Answer: 2.5 km = 2500 m

Exam Tip: Always replace prefix first.

NEET Numerical

Question: Write 0.00045 m in scientific notation.

Given: 0.00045 m

Formula: a × 10n

Substitution: 4.5 × 10-4 m

Calculation: Decimal moved 4 places

Final Answer: 4.5 × 10-4 m

Exam Tip: Coefficient must be between 1 and 10.

JEE Main Numerical

Question: Convert 72 km h-1 into m s-1.

Given: 72 km h-1

Formula: multiply by 5/18

Substitution: 72 × 5/18

Calculation: 20

Final Answer: 20 m s-1

Exam Tip: Use 5/18 for km h-1 to m s-1.

JEE Advanced Numerical

Question: Find SI unit of pressure using force/area.

Given: Pressure = force/area

Formula: N / m2

Substitution: kg m s-2 / m2

Calculation: kg m-1 s-2

Final Answer: kg m-1 s-2 or Pa

Exam Tip: Derive from base units.

IB Numerical

Question: Convert 3.2 μs to seconds.

Given: 3.2 μs

Formula: 1 μs = 10-6 s

Substitution: 3.2 × 10-6 s

Calculation: 3.2 × 10-6

Final Answer: 3.2 × 10-6 s

Exam Tip: Micro means 10-6.

IGCSE Numerical

Question: Convert 500 g to kg.

Given: 500 g

Formula: 1 g = 10-3 kg

Substitution: 500 × 10-3

Calculation: 0.5 kg

Final Answer: 0.5 kg

Exam Tip: Divide gram by 1000.

A-Level Numerical

Question: Convert 2 eV to joule.

Given: 2 eV

Formula: 1 eV = 1.6 × 10-19 J

Substitution: 2 × 1.6 × 10-19

Calculation: 3.2 × 10-19 J

Final Answer: 3.2 × 10-19 J

Exam Tip: eV is an energy unit.

13. PYQ and Exam-Style Questions

CBSE Exam-style Question

Question: Distinguish between fundamental and derived quantities.

Solution: Length is fundamental, velocity is derived from length/time.

Final Answer: Fundamental quantities are independent; derived quantities are formed from them.

Exam Tip: Give examples.

NEET Exam-style Question

Question: Which is not an SI base unit: metre, kelvin, newton, second?

Solution: Newton is derived unit of force.

Final Answer: newton

Exam Tip: Know base units.

JEE Main Exam-style Question

Question: The SI unit of energy in base units is?

Solution: Energy = work = force × displacement.

Final Answer: kg m2 s-2

Exam Tip: Start from force.

JEE Advanced Conceptual Question

Question: Why is unit consistency necessary in equations?

Solution: This is principle of homogeneity.

Final Answer: Only quantities with same dimensions can be added or equated.

Exam Tip: Use dimensional check.

IB Physics Exam-style Question

Question: Why are SI units preferred in scientific communication?

Solution: They prevent ambiguity.

Final Answer: They are internationally accepted and coherent.

Exam Tip: Mention standardization.

IGCSE Exam-style Question

Question: What does milli mean?

Solution: Example: 1 mm = 10-3 m.

Final Answer: 10-3

Exam Tip: Common prefix.

A-Level Exam-style Question

Question: Explain order of magnitude.

Solution: Used for quick comparison and estimation.

Final Answer: Nearest power of 10 estimate of a quantity.

Exam Tip: Estimate before calculating.

14. Concept Questions, Assertion Reason and Case Studies

Concept Question

Question: Why must every measurement have a unit?

Answer: Without unit, numerical value has no physical meaning.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

Concept Question

Question: Is speed scalar or vector?

Answer: Speed is scalar; velocity is vector.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

Assertion Reason

Question: Assertion: SI system is internationally accepted. Reason: It provides standard units for scientific communication.

Answer: Both are true and reason explains assertion.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

Assertion Reason

Question: Assertion: Force is derived quantity. Reason: Force = mass × acceleration.

Answer: Both are true and reason explains assertion.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

Case Study

Question: A student measures a wire length as 2.5 cm and converts it to metre. What is the value?

Answer: 2.5 cm = 2.5 × 10-2 m = 0.025 m.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

Case Study

Question: A physics table lists speed of light as 3.00 × 108 m s-1. How many significant figures are shown?

Answer: Three significant figures.

Explanation: This tests basic understanding of units and physical quantities.

15. Quick Revision

One-page Formula Sheet

  • Measurement = numerical value + unit
  • Velocity unit: m s-1
  • Force unit: kg m s-2
  • Energy unit: kg m2 s-2

Prefix Summary

  • kilo = 103
  • mega = 106
  • milli = 10-3
  • micro = 10-6
  • nano = 10-9

Common Mistakes

  • Writing sec instead of s.
  • Using Kg instead of kg.
  • Forgetting direction in vectors.
  • Confusing m for metre and m for milli in prefixes.
Last-minute exam tip: Learn seven base quantities, SI symbols, common prefixes and derived-unit formation. Most questions become easy if units are converted to SI first.
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