I honestly don't know what is 1/1000 of a yoctometer, but 20 trillionths of a yoctometer is a neutrino. The order of my knowledge in metric units go as follows: kilometers, hectometers, dekometers, (maybe correct spelling?) meters, centimeters, millimeters, micrometers, nanometers, picometers, zettameters, (hey, I don't know how to spell it.) yoctometers, and neutrinos.
not much
not much really
how much do chingy weight
Too much
1 yoctometer = 3.93700787 × 10-23 inches
" Yoctometer " is one of many.
Considering that the yoctometer is smaller than a proton, and everything basically, the only thing you could measure with a yoctometer is the center of a black hole, which is not necessarily confirmed since we do not quite have the technology to confirm. You can measure quantum foam the fabric of Einstein's space time theory also strings (1D) in the sting theory are measured in yoctometer Position uncertainty (in macro-objects) can be measured in yoctometers. Source http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/525347
I honestly don't know what is 1/1000 of a yoctometer, but 20 trillionths of a yoctometer is a neutrino. The order of my knowledge in metric units go as follows: kilometers, hectometers, dekometers, (maybe correct spelling?) meters, centimeters, millimeters, micrometers, nanometers, picometers, zettameters, (hey, I don't know how to spell it.) yoctometers, and neutrinos.
Yes there is, although there is no commonly known metric prefix. The Planck length, for example, is approx 1.616 199 97 times 10^{-35} metres. By contrast, a yoctometre is 10^(-24) metres so that the Planck length is less than 20 trillionths of a yoctometre..
10 yoctometer is equivalent to 1/10 of the diameter of an electron, and1/100 00 the diameter of a proton or neutron also10 yoctometres=1/100 zeptometre (zm).
A Millimeter is smaller, 10 millimeters to a centimeter and 100 centimeters to meter.
Hmm, it's not a yoctometer, it's actually a planck length, that's apparently the size of quantam foam. However, calling the planck length a 'measurement' is a little misleading since we have no means whatever of actually measuring things that small and we may never have. It is useful currently only in theoretical work. See the discussion and modify your question if necessary.
When you say "what is after", I assume you mean the next smallest. while a millimeter is 1x10-3 meters, the next smallest most commonly used unit of measure is the micrometer which is 1 x 10-6 meters.
It is ten to the power of minus twenty four (10^-24, or 1 divided by 10^24) of a meter.. So basically you divide a meter of length so that you have a septillion (that is one (1) followed by 24 zeros (0s)) of equally long parts. (actually equally short parts) Then you take one part, and the length of that part is a yoctometer.
1 yoctometer = 1 x 10^-24 meter = 0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 001 meterTo the extent that electrons and protons behave like little, hard billiard balls, the diameter ofan electron is in the neighborhood of 100 yoctometers, and of a proton, 100,000 yoctometers.The diameter of a penny is 3/4 inch, 19.05 millimeters, 19,050,000,000,000,000,000,000 yoctometers.
Here are ____meters, smallest to largest: yoctometer, zeptometer, attometer, femtometer, picometer, nanometer, micrometer, millimeter, centimeter, decimeter, meter, decameter, hectometer, kilometer, megameter, gigameter, terameter, petameter, exameter, zettameter, yottameter. Taking the prefeix from each of these words can be used with any other unit of measurement in the metric system. Here's the sentence: Yoshi zipped across fiery plains near Maine, mostly counting dames Mario ditched (mostly deserted him), killing monsters, Gigabowser, terrifying pirranhas... exciting zany Yoshi.