k as in kg means kilogram
In the SI, the usual SI prefixes would be used for smaller units - prefixes such as milli, micro, etc.
The "k" stands for kilo, which is the SI unit for a thousand, so one thousand grams is a kilogram, or, a gram is a thousandth of a kilogram.
If you mean the metric subdivisions, I suggest you search for "SI prefixes". Some extremely small prefixes are used, but they would normally not be used in your daily life for measuring lengths. The smallest divisions that are normally marked on a meter scale are the millimeters.
A2. The base units in the SI system are metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, candela, and mole.A1. Giga, mega, kilo, milli, micro, pica [A2 note these are a few of the multiples or sub-multiples.]
Milli and kilo aren't units, they are prefixes. Metric unit for length is the metre, this means all lengths are measured in metres. A millimetre is just another way of writing 0.001 metre, it isn't a different unit its a fraction of a metre. In the same way a kilometre is an abbreviation of 1 000 metre. Unlike older systems there is one unit for each measurement. Inch, foot, yard, mile are all used to measure length but they are all distinct units. In metric there is only the metre, we add prefixes to show fractions or multiples of metres, but the unit is still metres. The prefixes between milli and kilo are, milli (0.001), base unit, and kilo((1 000). On official list there are centi (0.01), deci (0.1), deca (10), and hect (100), but these are hardly ever used, the preference being for jumps of thousands.
The SI prefixes are from Greek, including deka, hecta, kilo, and mega (10, 100, 1000, 1 million)
denci is not an SI prefix. centi = 0.01 or one hundredth kilo = 1000 = thousand milli = 0.001 = one thousandth.
No, "femo" is not a SI prefix. The SI (International System of Units) prefixes are used to denote multiples or fractions of base units in the metric system, such as kilo-, mega-, milli-, etc.
The prefixes in this case are kilo, milli, and centi. Kilo means 1000, milli means 1/1000, centi means 1/100. For example, a kilogram is 1000 gram.The prefixes in this case are kilo, milli, and centi. Kilo means 1000, milli means 1/1000, centi means 1/100. For example, a kilogram is 1000 gram.The prefixes in this case are kilo, milli, and centi. Kilo means 1000, milli means 1/1000, centi means 1/100. For example, a kilogram is 1000 gram.The prefixes in this case are kilo, milli, and centi. Kilo means 1000, milli means 1/1000, centi means 1/100. For example, a kilogram is 1000 gram.
Sometimes you need a very large, or a very small, amount of a certain unit. One way to deal with that is to use prefixes like kilo, mega, milli, micro, and others.
That probably refers to the SI prefixes, such as kilo (meaning 1000), mega (meaning a million), milli (meaning 1/1000), etc.
Please take a look at the Wikipedia article "SI prefixes". There you can see the values of prefixes such as "mega", "kilo", and others. The prefixes are the same for all units. For example, "micro" always means a millionth, whether it is applied to gram, to hertz, to seconds, etc.
The correct order of prefixes beginning with kilo is kilo- (k), mega- (M), giga- (G), tera- (T), peta- (P). These prefixes are used to denote multiples of a unit of measurement.
kilo = 1,000 mega = 1,000,000 milli = 0.001 (or 1/1000)
For units larger or smaller than the base units, you can use prefixes such as kilo (x 1000), Mega (x 1 million), milli (x 0.001), micro (x 0.000 001), etc.; for a complete list, search the Wikipedia for "SI prefixes".
In the SI, the usual SI prefixes would be used for smaller units - prefixes such as milli, micro, etc.
super