A terametre is 1012 metres, a picometre is 10-12 metres. Therefore there are 1024 picometres in a terametre.
10 millimeters to a centimeter 10 centimeters to a decimeter (not used often) 10 decimeters to a meter 1 000 meters to a kilometer Basic Metric system 10^12 - Tera 10^9 - Giga 10^6 - Mega 10^3 - Kilo/meter 10 - Unit/meter 10^-1 - deci/meter 10^-2 - centi/meter 10^-3 - milli/meter 10^-6 - micro/meter 10^-9 - nano/meter 10^-12 - pico/meter
Its meter! Not metre! No, this is simply not the case at all. The "meter" is actually what we call an Americanism (America has basically changed the original spelling). The original (and still correct) spelling for that unit of length is the metre. Language use will change over time, true. But metre is at least as valid a way of spelling the unit of length as the American method.
Metre(m) is the fundamental unit. You can prefix centi-, kilo-, milli-, nano- etc to it to get bigger and smaller units. For example, 1000 meters is a kilometre(km) and 1/1000th of a metre is a millimetre(mm). Prefixes:* p (pico) 10-12 * n (nano) 10-9 * µ (micro) 10-6 * m (milli) 10-3 * k (kilo) 103 * M (mega) 106 * G (Giga) 109 * T (Tera) 1012 In addition to the above, 10 mm make a centimetre(cm).millimeters, centimeters, decimeters, meters, kilometers.Hour Second MillisecondMillimeterKilometerCentimeter
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The insulation resistance of air is extremely high, typically in the range of hundreds of teraohms to petaohms.
1 Meter= 0.000000000001 terameters
1 meter = 1.0 × 10-12 terameters
10 millimeters to a centimeter 10 centimeters to a decimeter (not used often) 10 decimeters to a meter 1 000 meters to a kilometer Basic Metric system 10^12 - Tera 10^9 - Giga 10^6 - Mega 10^3 - Kilo/meter 10 - Unit/meter 10^-1 - deci/meter 10^-2 - centi/meter 10^-3 - milli/meter 10^-6 - micro/meter 10^-9 - nano/meter 10^-12 - pico/meter
The prefix Tera means 1012, or a million millions.
meter (m), kilogram (kg), second (s), kelvin (K), and mole (mol) Prefixes: yotta, zetta, exa, peta, tera, giga, mega, kilo, hecto, deka, deci, centi, milli, micro, nano, pico, femto, atto, zepto, yocto
Meters = Units Basic Metric system 10^12 - Tera 10^9 - Giga 10^6 - Mega 10^3 - Kilo 10 - Unit 10^-1 - deci 10^-2 - centi 10^-3 - milli 10^-6 - micro 10^-9 - nano 10^-12 - pico
Deka is precisely that - a prefix that means "times 10". It can be used with all sorts of units, such as meters, hertz, ampere, etc., although usually, engineers and scientists prefer powers of 1000 (upwards: kilo, mega, giga, tera, etc., and downwards: milli, micro, nano, pico, etc.).
well, if you think about it, it is infinite. the furthest I know is exa, tera, giga, mega, centa, deca, deci, centi, milli, micro, nano, pico, femto, atto. so, did that help?
yotta- zetta- exa- peta- tera- giga- mega- kilo- hecto- deca- deci- centi- milli- micro- nano- pico- femto- atto- zepto- yocto-
That depends on what type of unit you are talking about (such as length, mass, time, etc.); but generally, a base unit is used (for instance, the meter for length), then prefixes (such as kilo, mega, Giga, Tera..., milli, micro, nano, pico...) are attached to create larger and smaller derived units.
Well, let's take a moment to appreciate the vastness of the term "Tera." In the world of numbers, Tera represents a trillion, which means there are 12 zeroes in Tera. Isn't that just wonderful? Just imagine all those zeroes coming together to create something truly magnificent.
The pico- prefix means x 10^-12 The tera- prefix means x 10^12 → 1 Ts / 1 ps = 1 x 10^12 / (1 x 10^-12) = 10^24.