An adult human foot is about 28 centimetres long.
To help compare different orders of magnitude this page lists lengths between (10 centimetres and 100 centimetres) (10−1 metre and 1 metre).
Distances shorter than 10 centimetres
Conversions
10 centimetres (abbreviated to 10 cm) is equal to
- 1 decimetre (dm), a term not in common use
- 100 millimetres
- 3.9 inches
- A side of a square of area 0.01 m2[note 1]
- The edge of a cube with a volume of 1 E-3 m³[note 1] (one litre)
Wavelengths
- 10 cm = 1.0 dm[note 1] — wavelength of the highest UHF radio frequency, 3 GHz
- 12 cm = 1.2 dm — wavelength of the 2.45 GHz ISM radio band
- 21 cm = 2.1 dm — wavelength of the 1.4 GHz hydrogen emission line, a hyperfine transition of the hydrogen atom
- 100 cm = 10 dm — wavelength of the lowest UHF radio frequency, 300 MHz
Human-defined scales and structures
- 10.16 cm = 1.016 dm — 1 hand used in measuring height of horses (4 inches)
- 12 cm = 1.2 dm — diameter of a Compact disc (CD) (= 120mm)
- 15 cm = 1.5 dm — length of a Bic pen with cap on
- 22 cm = 2.2 dm — diameter of a typical soccer ball
- 30.48 cm = 3.048 dm — 1 foot
- 30 cm = 3 dm — typical school-use ruler length (= 300mm)
- 60 cm = 6 dm — standard depth (front to back) of a domestic kitchen worktop in Europe (= 600mm)
- 90 cm = 9 dm — average length of a rapier, a fencing sword[citation needed]
- 91.44 cm is one yard
Nature
- 10 cm = 1 dm — diameter of the cervix upon entering the second stage of labour (in humans)
- 14 cm = 1.4 dm — length of average human penis
- 15 cm = 1.5 dm — approximate size of largest beetle species[citation needed]
- 29 cm = 2.9 dm — length of average human foot[citation needed]
- 29.98 cm = distance light travels in one nanosecond
- 31 cm = 3.1 dm — wingspan of largest butterfly species Ornithoptera alexandrae[citation needed]
- 50 to 65 cm — a pizote's tail[citation needed]
- 66 cm — length of the longest pine cones (produced by the sugar pine[citation needed])
See also
Click on the thumbnail image to jump to the desired Human-scale order of length magnitude article: top-left is 1E-6m, lower-right is 1E5m.
| Orders of magnitude for length in E notation, shorter than one metre: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <-24 | -24 | -23 | -22 | -21 | -20 | -19 | -18 | -17 | -16 | -15 | -14 | -13 | -12 | -11 | -10 | -9 | -8 | -7 | -6 | -5 | -4 | -3 | -2 | -1 | 0 |
| longer than 1 metre: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
Notes
- ^ a b c m is an abbreviation of metre; cm of centimetre; dm of decimetre; m2 is short for square metre; m3 is short for cubic metre
References
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




