Five Thieves

Sikh beliefs
1a. Simran (spiritual contemplation)1b. Sewa (selfless service)2. Three Pillars2a. Naam Japo (contemplating God’s names) Meditating on God’s name to control the five evils and living a satisfying life.2b. Kirat Karo (work diligently) Earning/making a living honestly, without exploitation or fraud2c. Vand Chhako Sharing with others, helping those with less or those who are in need3. Five Thieves3a. Kaam (lust)3b. Krodh (anger)3c. Lobh (greed)3d. Moh (attachment, e.g. to material things or people)3e. Hankaar (ego, pride)4. Five Virtues4a. Sat (truth)4b. Santokh (contentment)4c. Daya (compassion)4d. Nimrata (humility)4e. Pyaar (love)
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In Sikhism, the Five Thieves are the five major weaknesses of the human personality at variance with its spiritual essence, and are known as “thieves” because they steal a person’s inherent common sense. These five thieves are kama (lust), krodh (wrath), lobh (greed), moh (attachment) and ahankar (ego or excessive pride).[1]

The primary aim of a practicing Sikh is to subdue these five inner vices and render them inactive. The actions of one’s mind (and by extension, one’s body) should be above, beyond and without interference from these five inner evils. It is a Sikh’s dharma and duty to not become subject to these five lusts of the mind. A Sikh strives to live a life of devotion to Waheguru with a positive attitude or spirit (Chardi Kala), accepting God’s Will (Hukam), remembering God in Naam Japo, engaging in community service (Sewa) and practicing the Five Virtues. By taking these positive steps, the Five Thieves are gradually overcome and rendered powerless. Adopting this daily routine and discipline, ones actions become pure (nirmal) and rewarding. Through this process, any negativity and erroneous thinking in a person’s heart and mind are removed.

Contents

Significance of five[edit]

Some Sikhs regard the number five as special because of its presence in earlier Indian mythology and philosophy. Examples include the five rivers of the Punjab; the five faces of Shiva; the five aggregates of human personality (panca-skandha) and five moral precepts (pancasila) analyzed by the Buddha; the five vows of Jainism (pancavrates); the five fires (pancagni) and five koshas (sheaths or wrappers) investing the self (pancakosah) spoken of by the Upanisads; the five abstentions (yamas) and five observations (niyamas) of Yoga; the five senses; the five gross and subtle elements (panca mahabhuta or panca tattva); the five Panj Pyare; and even the Five Ks in Sikhism.

Despite the commonness of the number five, Sikh theology attaches no significance to the number itself. On the contrary, the Sikh teachings forbid the belief in superstition, and advise that the one who seeks the path to God must believe only in the naam (that is, God). Thus, a belief that the number five is significant, according to the Sikh theology, would be to become ensnared by the five evils themselves (specifically attachment – an inability to seek the truth because of one’s belief in illusory constructs).

History[edit]

The early Vedic literature bears no direct reference to the concept of ‘five thieves’; the terms moha, kama, krodha and aham do occur in the Vedic texts, but they are not explicitly enumerated as a series of “thieves”. However, each of these is separately condemned in various sections of The Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads. We observe that ascetic sages of both the Vedic and non-Vedic tradition propounded the philosophy of renunciation and the methods of sense-control. In the Bhagvad Gita, the control of one’s senses, as well as being imperturbable in the face of kama, moha, krodha and aham, are among the marked traits of the Shresta Vyakti (the Perfect Man) and Yogi (Knower). Many of the Upanisads display an awareness of the evils like raga or passion, avidya or nescience, moha or delusion, and ahankara or egoity. These thieves are also mentioned and condemned in some of the post-Buddhistic Upanisads such as the Prasna, Svetasvatara, Aitareya, Isa and Mundaka. The last-named text refers to ‘the sages whose defilements have been destroyed’ (ksinadosah), although it does not enumerate the ‘defilements’.

Long before these later Upanisads, also, leaders of sramanic philosophers had expounded soteriological techniques in which eradication of all evils and imperfections was considered sine qua non for ultimate release. It is in the teachings of Kapilamuni, Parsvanatha, Sakyamuni and Mahavira that one finds a detailed discussion of the nature and function of kama, krodha, lobha, moha and ahankara and many other kindred vices.

The old Pali texts contain three lists of evils and factors which obstruct meditation and moral perfection. The list of five ‘hindrances’ (nivaranas) consists of sensuous desire, ill will, sloth and torpor, restlessness and sceptical doubt. These hindrances blind man’s mental vision and make concentration difficult. The list of ten ‘fetters‘ (sanyojanas), which bind beings to sansara, comprises the following: belief in a permanent individuality, sceptical doubt, belief in the efficacy of mere moral observances and rituals, sensual passion, ill will, desire for existence in the material world, desire for existence in the immaterial world, conceit, restlessness and nescience.

Buddhism[edit]

The first two in the list of five hindrances, sensuous desire (kamacchanda) and ill will or malice, are the same as the first two in the list of five evils mentioned in the Sikh canon. Likewise, belief in a permanent individuality (satkayadrsti), sensual passion (kamaraga), ill will, conceit (mana) and nescience (avidya), included in the Buddhist list of ten fetters, are comparable to egotism, lust, wrath, pride and delusion or attachment of Sikh enumeration.

The third Buddhist list of ten ‘defilements’ (Pali kilesa, Punjabi kalesh and Skt. klesa), includes the following: greed (lobha), hatred (dosa), delusion (moha), conceit (mana), false views, sceptical doubt, sloth, distraction, shamelessness and recklessness. In this list, again, the first four defilements are nearly identical with those included in the list of’ ‘five evils’ minus lust (kama). This last evil is mentioned separately and repeatedly in the Buddhist scriptures in Pali as well as in Sanskrit. Similarly wrath (krodha) is mentioned separately as a powerful enemy of holy life. Early Buddhist sources describe the triad of lobha, dosa (dvesa), and moha as the three roots of evil (akusala-mula).[2] One of the standard Buddhist words for evil is klesa which may be translated as ‘defilement’ or ‘depravity’. A list of six defilements is found in some Buddhist Sanskrit sources and includes passion (raga), ill will (pratigha), conceit (mana), nescience (avidya), false view (kudrsti), and sceptical doubt (vichikitsa).

Jainism[edit]

The Jaina sources also contain details concerning evils and defilements. All the five evils of the Sikh list are found repeatedly mentioned in the sacred literature of Jainism. The Avasyakasutra has a list of eighteen sins which includes among others wrath (krodha), conceit, delusion (maya), greed, and ill will. The standard Jaina term for evil is ‘dirt’ or ‘passion’ (kasaya). The Dasavaikalikasutra states that four kasayas, viz. wrath, conceit, delusion and greed, cause rebirth. The Uttaradhyayanasutra mentions moha, trsna (synonym of kama) and lobha as the sources of sorrow.

The Yogasutra (II. 3) has a list of five defilements or hindrances called panca-klesah. These are nescience (avidya), egoity (asmita), passion (raga), ill will (dvesa) and the will to live (abhinivesa). Avidya equals moha; asmita is identical with ahankara; raga is similar to kama; dvesa is not different from krodha; and abhinivesa belongs to the category of lobha understood as continuous desire for existence in sansa

Hinduism – Bhagavad Gita[edit]

The Bhagavad Gita mentions all the five evils although they are not all enumerated together at the same place as forming a pentad. The text mentions kama as lust and at one point it is identified with krodha. Besides kama and krodha which are called asuri (demonic) traits, the Bhagavad Gita mentions passion (raga), ill will, attachment, delusion, egoity, greed, conceit and nescience (ajnana), and employs terms such as papa, dosa and kalmasa for impurities or defilements. In one verse hypocrisy, arrogance, conceit, wrath, harsh speech and nescience are described as demoniac qualities. Medieval Buddhist, Jainist, and Brahmanical authors of religious and philosophical works continued to discuss the meaning, nature and methods of eradicating the five and more evils. The Tantric adepts (siddhas) recommended rather radical techniques of combating the evil psychological forces, especially through the method of ‘conquering passions through passions’. Reference may be made here to Tulasidasa who, in a series of quadriparti verses (chaupais) in his Ramacharitamanasa, acknowledges the universality of kama, krodha, lobha, moha, mana and trsna which afflict not only men but also the gods.The evils are want,idleness,disease,ignorance and squalor

The Five Inner Thieves[edit]

There is no philosophical or theological explication of the five thieves, collectively or individually, in Sikh Scripture, but man is repeatedly warned against them. They have been called diseases or maladies which afflict human beings with disastrous effects. In at least five instances there is a list in the Sikh Holy Book which consists of the following: kamkrodhlobhmoh and abhiman or ahankar. At one place instead of moh and abhiman we have “mad” and “ninda”. Here the word “mad” may be interpreted in the sense of ‘intoxication born of egoity’. The word ninda means slander. In two of the seven instances cited here the members of the evil pentad are called ‘five thieves’ (panj-chor). In a hymn by Kabir the list has trishna (craving), kam, krodh, mad and matsar as the five evils. The word trishna (Skt. trsna) means craving or desire, while the word matsar means jealousy. Often the five evils are referred to as ‘the five’ (panj) or ‘all the five’ (sare panj). At places the five organs of sense (jnanendriyas) are also often referred to as “the five”.

One, two, three or four of the five cardinal thieves are repeatedly mentioned almost throughout the body of the Sikh canon. The triad kamkrodh and lobh finds as frequent a mention as the triad kamkrodh and ahankar or mohlobh and ahankar. Among the five evils the one that is condemned more than the others is ahankar. When only two of the five are mentioned, the pair consists either of kam and krodh, or of moh and “guman”, or of lobh and moh; when a group of four out of the five evils is cited, it usually consists of the first four, kamkrodhlobh and moh. Since the Sikh canon is a composite text containing the religious poetry not only of the Gurus but also of several saints and Sufis from various regions, synonyms, occasionally from different languages, occur. Thus lobh is also called lalach; man is called garab (Sanskrit garva) and guman; moh is also called bharam (Skt. bhrama). A word of most frequent occurrence is haumai. It is perhaps derived from aham, ‘I’ or egoity, the essential element of ego; hankar, ahankar are its semantic cognates. The word man is employed in a double sense; sometimes it is clearly used in the sense of ‘honour’ or ‘respect’. In most cases, however, it is synonymous with “abhiman”.

Is Haumai (Ego) the worst thief?[edit]

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Although it is permissible to identify haumai with ahankar, the fact that haumai is not included in the evil pentad and yet comes in for the strongest censure in the Scripture would lead to the conclusion that it is regarded as a major evil in addition to those forming the pentad. It may be added that haumai or egoity, self-centredness, the personality system, the belief in one’s individual existence, is the basis of all the other evils. From this standpoint, ahankar may be reckoned as an offshoot of haumai. The assertion or affirmation of ‘I’ runs counter to the affirmation of ‘Thou’; the consciousness of ‘self existence’ or ‘one’s own existence’ (sva-bhava or atma-bhava) is diametrically opposed to the consciousness of God’s existence. In a system in which the sole reality of God (ik onkar) is the first principle, there can be no room for the reality of an individual existence or one’s own existence apart from, or along with, the existence of God. To say that God alone is the reality means that there is no other reality that belongs to someone else, and that there is no someone else who can claim an independent reality of their own. The truth is that there is no truth in haumai.

Nevertheless, this unreal reality, this false truth apparently exists. It is unreal and false from the standpoint of God who is the only absolute Reality; it is real and true from the standpoint of the fettered creatures coursing in sansar (the world). These creatures have assumed a reality of their own; every fettered being is seemingly convinced of its own existence; this conviction flourishes in its ignorance of God’s reality. There can be no such thing as co-existence of God and not-God; Reality and falsity cannot co-exist as cannot light and darkness. Therefore, where there is awareness of God’s reality there is absence of one’s own reality, and vice versa; where there is awareness of one’s own existence or haumai, there is absence of the awareness of God’s existence. The Scripture says: “Haumai jai ta kant samai – “God is realized only when one eradicates egoity” (GG, 750); literally, “(one) merges into (one’s) Lord only when (her/his) egoity has disappeared”.

The five evils, lust, wrath, greed, attachment and egoity, flourish on the soil of the belief in one’s individualized existence. By destroying the doctrine of one’s own existence or the belief in one’s individual reality, the sages (santsadh) cancel in one stroke, as it were, the entire catalogue of evils. Desire, anger, avarice, infatuation, egoism, passion, jealousy, hypocrisy, pride, deception, falsehood, violence, doubt, and nescience and other forms of depravity listed in the Guru Granth Sahib do not affect they who have overcome themselves and found their essence in God’s reality. Liberation (mukti) means the extinction of all the evils headed by haumai.

The Sikh canon also points to the way of extinguishing evils of all kinds. It is acknowledged that the five evils afflict all beings in sansar and that it is difficult to control them. Yet the possibility of conquering them is not ruled out in the theological framework of Sikhism; the moral training of a Sikh is in fact directed towards controlling the senses and eradicating the evils. The seeker of liberation has first to liberate themself of the yoke of the pentad. No headway can be made towards God-realization without discarding the cardinal evils. Kabir says, “He alone cherishes the Lord’s feet who is rid of desire, wrath, greed and attachment” – “kamu krodhu lobhu mohu bibarjit haripadu chinai soi” (GG, 1123).

Devotion and Sadh Sangat[edit]

Loving devotion (bhagtibhakti) to God is, according to Sikhism, the way to ultimate release. One can love God only when one has annihilated self-love; this means that the devotee must be humble and surrender themself fully unto God. The Gurus stress the necessity of taking refuge in God. To this end, one must first renounce pride (man). Constant awareness of God (simran) is the panacea for all ills. Devotion to God eradicates the evils in an instant and purifies the body (GG, 245). The destruction of evils may be viewed both as a cause and consequence of the practice of nam simran. Awareness of God’s presence comes only when lust, wrath, avarice, attachment and egoity have departed from the devotee; when the devotee lives in constant awareness of God, the evils touch them not. Such a person is unaffected by pleasure and pain, for they have freed themself from evils such as lobhmoh and abhimanGuru Tegh Bahadur describes such a sage as one liberated while still alive and calls them an image of God on earth (GG, I426-27).

Another way of overcoming haomai and other evils is to keep the company of the saints (sant) or Sadh Sangat (holy congregation) who both radiate virtuous qualities. One kills lust, wrath, greed and other depravities of the evil age (kali-kales) by taking refuge in the sangat, the holy fellowship. It is by discarding the most powerful of evils, egoity, that one can get admission to this sacred society. Egoity ceases as one takes to the company of the holy (GG, 271). A third method of overcoming the evils is to submit oneself to the instruction of the spiritual preceptor (guru). Those who would overcome the five evils must follow their teaching. The wisdom obtained from the preceptor is like a swift sword (kharagu karara) which cuts through confusion, infatuation, avarice and egoity (GG, 1087). One celebrates God’s virtues through the favour of the sage (sant prasadi) and destroys lust, anger and insanity born of egoism (unmad). In Guru Nanak‘s Sidh Gosti it is stated that without the preceptor one’s efforts bear no fruit. The importance of living up to the instruction of the holy preceptor can be judged from the concept of the ‘Guru-oriented person’ (gurmukh) so central to the Sikh moral system. A gurmukh is one who has turned their face towards the Guru, that is to say, a person who by practising what the Guru teaches has freed themself from the depravities and lives in the Divine presence. They achieve this position by conquering the evils under the guidance of the Guru and ever remains in tune with the Supreme Reality.

Interrelationship[edit]

The existence of Five thieves could possibly be linked out of interdependence on each other. Philosophical implication of the matrix portrays the observational decrease in one thief upon willfully controlling the other, or vice versa

DoshKama (Lust)Krodh (Rage)Lobh (Greed)Moh (Attachment)Ahankar (Conceit)
Kama (Lust)RejectionMoney and Materials required to have alpha traitsPleasureFalse sense of superiority
Krodh (Rage)Triggers false sense of ego which has to be defended
Lobh (Greed)Being greedy can cause self centered behavior, thus objectificationWe get angry if we don’t get what we think we shouldAttachment to illegitimate thingsGreed causes shallowness of spirit which forces us to defend our wrongs as well
Moh (Attachment)We get angry if we lose what we think rightfully belongs to usAttachment makes us want more of it without being awareAttachment causes shallowness of spirit which forces us to defend our wrongs as well
Ahankar (Conceit)False sense of superiority makes us lust because we think we deserve itRejectionMoney and Materials required to have alpha traitsAttachment to worldly things

See also[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Jodh Singh, Bhai, Gurmati Nirnaya. Lahore, 1932
  • Sher Singh, The Philosophy of Sikhism. Lahore, 1944
  • Nirbhai Singh, Philosophy of Sikhism. Delhi, 1990
  • Nripinder Singh, The Sikh Moral Tradition. Delhi, 1990
  • Teja Singh Essays in Sikhism. Lahore, 1941
  • Wazir Singh, Philosophy of Sikh Religion. Delhi, 1981
  • Avtar Singh, Ethics of the Sikhs. Patiala, 1970

Above adapted from article By L. M. Joshi

References[edit]

  1. ^ Izzo, John B. (2017). The Five Thieves of Happiness. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers. p. 7. ISBN 9781626569348.
  2. ^ Priyadarshana, Wasantha (March–August 2017). “Buddhism As a System of Psychotherapy” (PDF). The Smaratungga Journal of Buddhist Studies and Education1: 37.

Categories

Unusual units of measurement

An unusual unit of measurement is a unit of measurement that does not form part of a coherent system of measurement; especially in that its exact quantity may not be well known or that it may be an inconvenient multiple or fraction of base units in such systems.

This definition is not exact since it includes units such as the week or the light-year are quite “usual” in the sense that they are often used but which can be “unusual” if taken out of their common context, as demonstrated by the furlong-firkin-fortnight (FFF) system of units.

Many of the unusual units of measurements listed here are colloquial measurements, units devised to compare a measurement to common and familiar objects.

Contents

Length[edit]

Rack unit[edit]

A typical section of rack rail, showing rack unit distribution.Main article: Rack unit

One rack unit (U) is 1.75 inches (44.45 mm) and is used to measure rack-mountable audiovisual, computing and industrial equipment. Rack units are typically denoted without a space between the number of units and the ‘U’. Thus a 4U server enclosure (case) is seven inches (177.8 mm) high.

Hand[edit]

Main article: Hand (unit)

The hand is a non-SI unit of length equal to exactly 4 inches (101.6 mm). It is normally used to measure the height of horses in some English-speaking countries, including Australia,[1] Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland and the United States.

Light-nanosecond[edit]

The light-nanosecond is defined as exactly 29.9792458 cm. It was popularized as a unit of distance by Grace Hopper as the distance which a photon could travel in one billionth of a second (roughly 30 cm or one foot): “The speed of light is one foot per nanosecond.” In her speaking engagements, she was well known for passing out light-nanoseconds of wire to the audience, and contrasting it with light-microseconds (a coil of wire 1,000 times as long) and light-picoseconds (the size of ground black pepper). Over the course of her life, she found many uses for this visual aid, including demonstrating the waste of sub-optimal programming, illustrating advances in computer speed, and simply giving young scientists and policy makers the ability to conceptualize the magnitude of very large and small numbers.[2]

Metric foot[edit]

metric foot (defined as 300 mm, or about 11.8 inches) has been used occasionally in the UK[3] but has never been an official unit.

Horse[edit]

Main article: Horse length

Horses are used to measure distances in horse racing – a horse length (shortened to merely a length when the context makes it obvious) equals roughly 8 feet or 2.4 metres. Shorter distances are measured in fractions of a horse length; also common are measurements of a full or fraction of a head, a neck, or a nose.[4]

Boat length[edit]

In rowing races such as the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race, the margin of victory and of defeat is expressed in fractions and multiples of lengths. The length of a rowing eight is about 62 feet (19 m). A shorter distance is the canvas, which is the length of the covered part of the boat between the bow and the bow oarsman. The Racing Rules of Sailing also makes heavy use of boat lengths.

Football field (length)[edit]

A football field is often used as a comparative measurement of length when talking about distances that may be hard to comprehend when stated in terms of standard units.

An American football field is usually understood to be 100 yards (91 m) long, though it is technically 120 yards (110 m) when including the two 10 yd (9.1 m) long end zones. The field is 160 ft (53 yd; 49 m) wide.[5]

Canadian football field is 65 yd (59 m) wide and 150 yd (140 m) long, including two 20 yd (18 m) long end zones.

Media in the UK also use the football pitch as a unit of length, although the area of the association football pitch is not fixed, but may vary within limits of 90–120 m (98–131 yd) in length and 45–90 m (49–98 yd) in width. The usual size of a football pitch is 105 m × 68 m (115 yd × 74 yd), the dimensions used for matches in the UEFA Champions League.

Block[edit]

city block (in most US cities) is between 116 and 18 mi (100 and 200 m). In Manhattan, the measurement “block” usually refers to a north–south block, which is 120 mi (80 m). Sometimes people living in places (like Manhattan) with a regularly spaced street grid will speak of long blocks and short blocks. Within a typical large North American city, it is often only possible to travel along east–west and north–south streets, so travel distance between two points is often given in the number of blocks east–west plus the number north–south (known to mathematicians as the Manhattan Metric).[6]

The Earth’s circumference[edit]

The circumference of a great circle of the Earth (about 40,000 km or 25,000 mi or 22,000 nmi) is often compared to large distances. For example, one might say that a large number of objects laid end-to-end at the equator “would circle the Earth four and a half times”.[7] According to WGS-84, the circumference of a circle through the poles (twice the length of a meridian) is 40,007,862.917 metres (43,753,130.924 yd) and the length of the equator is 40,075,016.686 metres (43,826,571.179 yd). Despite the fact that the difference (0.17%) between the two is insignificant at the low precision that these quantities are typically given to, it is nevertheless often specified as being at the equator.[citation needed]

The definitions of both the nautical mile and the kilometre were originally derived from the Earth’s circumference as measured through the poles. The nautical mile was defined as a minute of arc of latitude measured along any meridian. A circle has 360 degrees, and each degree is 60 minutes, so the nautical mile was defined as ​121,600 of the Earth’s circumference, or about 1,852.22 metres. However, by international agreement, it is now defined to be exactly 1,852 metres (6,076 ft).

The metre was originally defined as ​110,000,000 of the distance from a pole to the equator, or as ​140,000,000 of the Earth’s circumference as measured through the poles. This standard made the historical metre 0.0197% longer than the modern standard metre, which is calculated based on the distance covered by light in a vacuum in a set amount of time.

Earth-to-Moon distance[edit]

The distance between the Earth’s and the Moon’s surfaces is, on average, approximately 380,000 km or 240,000 miles. This distance is sometimes used in the same manner as the circumference of the Earth; that is, one might say that a large number of objects laid end-to-end “would reach all the way to the Moon and back two-and-a-half times”.

The abbreviation for the Earth-to-Moon distance is “LD” which stands for “Lunar Distance“, used in astronomy to express close approaches of Earth by minor planets.

Siriometer[edit]

The siriometer is a rarely used astronomical measure equal to one million astronomical units, i.e., one million times the average distance between the Sun and Earth. This distance is equal to about 15.8 light-years, 149.6 Pm or 4.8 parsecs, and is about twice the distance from Earth to the star Sirius.

Area[edit]

Barn[edit]

Main article: Barn (unit)

One barn is 10−28 square metres, about the cross-sectional area of a uranium nucleus. The name probably derives from early neutron-deflection experiments, when the uranium nucleus was described, and the phrases “big as a barn” and “hit a barn door” were used. Barn are typically used for cross sections in nuclear and particle physics. Additional units include the microbarn (or “outhouse”)[8] and the yoctobarn (or “shed”).[9][10]

Brass[edit]

One brass is 100 square feet (9.29 m2) area (used in measurement of work done or to be done, such as plastering, painting, etc.). It is also equal, however, to 100 cubic feet (2.83 m3) of estimated or supplied loose material, such as sand, gravel, rubble, etc. This unit is prevalent in construction industry in India.[11][12]

Square[edit]

The square is an Imperial unit of area that is used in the construction industry in North America,[13] and was historically used in Australia by real estate agents. One square is equal to 100 square feet (9.29 m2). A roof‘s area may be calculated in square feet, then converted to squares.

Cow’s grass[edit]

In Ireland, before the 19th century, a “cow’s grass” was a measurement used by farmers to indicate the size of their fields. A cow’s grass was equal to the amount of land that could produce enough grass to support a cow.[14][15]

Football field (area)[edit]

On this schema, an association football field is used to help to conceptualize the size of a polo field.

football pitch, or field, can be used as a man-in-the-street unit of area.[16][17] The standard FIFA football pitch is 105 m (344 ft) long by 68 m (223 ft) wide (7,140 m2 or 0.714 ha or 1.76 acres); FIFA allows for a variance of up to 5 m (16 ft) in length and 4 m (13 ft) in width in either direction (and even larger discretions if the pitch is not used for international competition), which generally results in the association football pitch generally only being used for order of magnitude comparisons.[18]

An American football field, including both end zones, is 360 by 160 ft (120.0 by 53.3 yd; 109.7 by 48.8 m), or 57,600 square feet (5,350 m2) (0.535 hectares or 1.32 acres). A Canadian football field is 65 yards (59 m) wide and 110 yards (100 m) long with end zones adding a combined 40 yards (37 m) to the length, making it 87,750 square feet (8,152 m2) or 0.8215 ha (2.030 acres).

An Australian rules football field may be approximately 150 metres (160 yd) (or more) long goal to goal and 135 metres (148 yd) (or more) wide, although the field’s elliptical nature reduces its area to a certain extent. A 150-by-135-metre (164 by 148 yd) football field has an area of approximately 15,900 m2 (1.59 ha; 3.9 acres), twice the area of a Canadian football field and three times that of an American football field.

Morgen[edit]

Main article: Morgen

morgen (“morning” in Dutch and German) was approximately the amount of land tillable by one man behind an ox in the morning hours of a day. This was an official unit of measurement in South Africa until the 1970s, and was defined in November 2007 by the South African Law Society as having a conversion factor of 1 morgen = 0.856532 hectares.[19] This unit of measure was also used in the Dutch colonial province of New Netherland (later New York and parts of New England).[20][21]

Countries, regions, and cities[edit]

Wales (red) in the UK (pink)

The area of a familiar country, state or city is often used as a unit of measure, especially in journalism.

Wales[edit]

Equal to 20,779 km2 (8,023 sq mi), the country of Wales is used in phrases such as “an area the size of Wales”[22] or “twice the area of Wales”.[23][24] England is 6.275 times the size of Wales, and Scotland is roughly four times the size of Wales. Ireland is four times larger than Wales, and France is about twenty-five times larger.

In older British and Commonwealth atlases, it was common to show a known area at the same scale, and the usual area to show was either Wales for smaller scales, or Great Britain for larger areas.[citation needed]

The British comedy show The Eleven O’Clock Show parodied the use of this measurement, by introducing a news article about an earthquake in Wales, stating that an area the size of Wales was affected. The Radio 4 programme More or Less introduced the idea of “kilowales” – an area 1,000 times the size of Wales. The Register introduced the nanowales (20.78 m2).[25]

The measurement has been adopted by rainforest conservation charity Size of Wales, aiming to conserve an area of rainforest equating to the area of Wales. On 1 March 2013, the charity announced that they had succeeded[26] in conserving an area of rainforest the size of Wales and will continue to operate to sustain and increase the protected area.[27]

The United States[edit]

In the United States the area of the smallest state, Rhode Island (1,545 sq mi or 4,000 km2); the largest of the contiguous 48 states, Texas (268,601 sq mi or 695,670 km2); and, less commonly, Alaska (656,425 sq mi or 1,700,130 km2) are used in a similar fashion. Antarctica‘s Larsen B ice shelf was approximately the size of Rhode Island until it broke up in 2002. In the 1979 movie The China Syndrome, radiation is expected to contaminate “an area the size of Pennsylvania“. Any state may be used in this fashion to describe the area of another country.

The US Central Intelligence Agency uses Washington, D.C. (61.4 sq mi or 159 km2) as a comparison for city-sized objects.[citation needed]

Other countries[edit]

In the Netherlands, its smallest province, Utrecht (1,386 km2 or 535 sq mi), is often used as a comparison for regions in general.

The country of Belgium (30,528 km2 or 11,787 sq mi) has also often been used when comparing areas, to the point where it has been regarded as a meme[28] and where there is a website dedicated to notable areas which have been compared to that of Belgium.

The Isle of Wight (380 km2 or 147 sq mi), an island off the south coast of mainland England, is commonly used to define smaller areas. It has sometimes been used in attempts to examine whether a certain amount of a given object or group would fit in a space its size; in 2018, it was estimated that approximately 2.6 billion people could fit on the Isle of Wight, at a population density of six people per square metre.[29]

In Denmark, the island of Bornholm (588 square kilometers) is often used to describe the size of an area.

In Germany, the Saarland (2,569.69 km2 or 992.16 sq mi) is often used to define areas.[30]

In Brazil, it is common to compare relatively small areas to the state of Sergipe (21,910.4 km2 or 8,459.7 sq mi), the smallest in the country. Smaller areas are sometimes compared to the cities of São Paulo (1,521.11 km2 or 587.30 sq mi) or Rio de Janeiro (1,221 km2 or 471 sq mi).

Volume[edit]

Metric ounce[edit]

A metric ounce is an approximation of the imperial ounce, US dry ounce, or US fluid ounce. These three customary units vary. However, the metric ounce is usually taken as 25 or 30 ml when volume is being measured, or grams when mass is being measured.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) defines the “food labeling ounce” as 30 ml, slightly larger than the 29.6 ml fluid ounce.[31]

Shot[edit]

Main article: Shot glass

Three shot glasses of varying shape and size

The shot is a liquid volume measure that varies from country to country and state to state depending on legislation. It is routinely used for measuring strong liquor or spirits when the amount served and consumed is smaller than the more common measures of alcoholic “drink” and “pint”. There is a legally defined maximum size of a serving in some jurisdictions. The size of a “single” shot is 20–60 ml (0.70–2.11 imp fl oz; 0.68–2.03 US fl oz). The smaller “pony” shot is 20–30 ml (0.70–1.06 imp fl oz; 0.68–1.01 US fl oz). According to Encyclopædia Britannica Almanac 2009, a pony is 0.75 fluid ounces[clarification needed] of liquor.[32] According to Wolfram Alpha, one pony is 1 U.S. fluid ounce.[33] “Double” shots (surprisingly not always the size of two single shots, even in the same place) are 40–100 ml (1.4–3.5 imp fl oz; 1.4–3.4 US fl oz). In the UK, spirits are sold in shots of either 25 ml (approximating the old fluid ounce) or 35 ml.[34]

Board foot or super foot[edit]

Main article: Board foot

A board foot is a United States and Canadian unit of volume, used for lumber. It is equivalent to 1 inch × 1 foot × 1 foot (144 cu in or 2,360 cm3). It is also found in the unit of density pounds per board foot. In Australia and New Zealand the terms super foot or superficial foot were formerly used for this unit.

Hoppus foot[edit]

Further information: Hoppus

A system of measure for timber in the round (standing or felled), now largely superseded by the metric system except in measuring hardwoods in certain countries. Its purpose is to estimate the value of sawn timber in a log, by measuring the unsawn log and allowing for wastage in the mill. Following the so-called “quarter-girth formula” (the square of one quarter of the circumference in inches multiplied by ​1144 of the length in feet), the notional log is four feet in circumference, one inch of which yields the hoppus board foot, 1 foot yields the hoppus foot, and 50 feet yields a hoppus ton. This translates to a hoppus foot being equal to 1.273 cubic feet (2,200 in3; 0.0360 m3). The hoppus board foot, when milled, yields about one board foot. The volume yielded by the quarter-girth formula is 78.54% of cubic measure (i.e. 1 ft3 = 0.7854 h ft; 1 h ft = 1.273 ft3).[35]

Cubic ton[edit]

Main article: Cubic ton

A cubic ton is an antiquated measure of volume, varying based on the commodity from about 16 to 45 cu ft (0.45 to 1.27 m3). It is now only used for lumber, for which one cubic ton is equivalent to 40 cu ft (1.1 m3).

Cord and rick[edit]

A cord of woodMain article: Cord (unit)

The cord is a unit of measure of dry volume used in Canada and the United States to measure firewood and pulpwood. A cord is the amount of wood that, when “ranked and well stowed” (arranged so pieces are aligned, parallel, touching and compact), occupies a volume of 128 cubic feet (3.62 m3).[36] This corresponds to a well-stacked woodpile, 4 feet deep by 4 feet high by 8 feet wide (122 cm × 122 cm × 244 cm), or any other arrangement of linear measurements that yields the same volume. A more unusual measurement for firewood is the “rick” or face cord. It is stacked 16 inches (40.6 cm) deep with the other measurements kept the same as a cord, making it ​13 of a cord; however, regional variations mean that its precise definition is nonstandardized.[37]

Twenty-foot equivalent unit[edit]

Main article: Twenty-foot equivalent unit

The twenty-foot equivalent unit is the volume of the smallest standard shipping container. It is equivalent to 1,360 cubic feet (39 m3). Larger intermodal containers are commonly described in multiples of TEU, as are container ship capacities.

Double decker bus[edit]

The approximate volume of a double-decker bus, abbreviated to DDB, has been used informally to describe the size of hole created by a major sewer collapse. For example, a report might refer to “a 4 DDB hole”.[38]

Acre-foot[edit]

Main article: Acre-foot

An acre-foot is a unit of volume commonly used in the United States in reference to large-scale water resources, such as reservoirs, aqueducts, canals, sewer flow capacity, irrigation water[39] and river flows. It is defined by the volume of one acre of surface area to a depth of one foot (43,560 ft3) which is about 1,233.48 m3 (325,850 US gal; 271,330 imp gal).

Olympic-size swimming pool[edit]

An Olympic-size swimming pool holds over 2 acre-feet of water.

For larger volumes of liquid, one measure commonly used in the media in many countries is the Olympic-size swimming pool.[40] A 50 m × 25 m (164 ft × 82 ft) Olympic swimming pool, built to the FR3 minimum depth of 2 metres (6.6 ft) would hold 2,500 m3 (2,500,000 l; 550,000 imp gal; 660,000 US gal; 2.0 acre⋅ft). The US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines the Olympic swimming pool as 1 million litres, which is the approximate volume of the smaller FR2 pool.[41]

Royal Albert Hall[edit]

The Royal Albert Hall, a large concert hall, is sometimes used as a unit of volume in the UK, for example when referring to volumes of rubbish placed in landfill.[42] It is famously used in the line “Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall.” in The Beatles song “A Day in the Life“.[43] The volume of the auditorium is between 3 and 3.5 million cubic feet (between 85,000 and 99,000 cubic metres).[44]

Melbourne Cricket Ground[edit]

A common measure of volume in Australia, and in the state of Victoria in particular, is the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the largest stadium in Australia and 13th largest in the world.[45] The volume of the Melbourne Cricket Ground is 1,574,000 cubic metres, or about 630 Olympic swimming pools.[46] The seating capacity of the Melbourne Cricket Ground (100,000 as of July 2019) is also used as a unit measure of the number of people.

Sydney Harbour[edit]

Sydney Harbour (Port Jackson), contains enough water to fill the Melbourne Cricket Ground 357 times or about 238,000 Olympic swimming pools.

A unit of volume used in Australia for water. One Sydney Harbour, also called a Sydharb (or sydarb), is the amount of water in Sydney Harbour: approximately 562 gigalitres (562,000,000 cubic metres, or 0.562 of a cubic kilometre); or in terms of the more unusual measures above, about 357 Melbourne Cricket Grounds, 238,000 Olympic Swimming pools, or 476,000 acre-feet.[47][48][49]

The Grand Canyon[edit]

With a volume measure approximately 4 orders of magnitude greater than a Sydharb, the volume of the Grand Canyon may be used to visualize even larger things, like the magma chamber underneath Yellowstone[50] and other things.[51][52] According to the National Park Service, the volume of the Grand Canyon is 4.17 trillion cubic metres (5.45 trillion cubic yards)[53] which is 4,170 km3 (1,000 cu mi).

Flow rate[edit]

Miner’s inch[edit]

Main article: Miner’s inch

The volume of water which flows in one unit of time through an orifice one inch square or in diameter. The size of the unit varies from one place to another.

Mass[edit]

Bag of cement and bag mix[edit]

The mass of an old bag of cement was one hundredweight ~ 112 lb, approximately 50 kg. The amount of material that, say, an aircraft could carry into the air is often visualised as the number of bags of cement that it could lift. In the concrete and petroleum industry, however, a bag of cement is defined as 94 pounds (~ 42.6 kg), because it has an apparent volume close to 1 cubic foot (28 L).[54] When ready-mix concrete is specified, a “bag mix” unit is used as if the batching company mixes 5 literal bags of cement per cubic yard (or cubic metre) when a “5 bag mix” is ordered.

Grave[edit]

In 1793, the French term “grave” (from “gravity”) was suggested as the base unit of mass for the metric system. In 1795, however, the name “kilogramme” was adopted instead.

Jupiter[edit]

Jupiter

When reporting on the masses of extrasolar planets, astronomers often discuss them in terms of multiples of Jupiter’s mass (MJ = 1.9 ×1027 kg).[55] For example, “Astronomers recently discovered a planet outside our Solar System with a mass of approximately 3 Jupiters.” Furthermore, the mass of Jupiter is nearly equal to one thousandth of the mass of the Sun.

Sun[edit]

Solar mass (M = 2.0×1030 kg) is also often used in astronomy when talking about masses of stars or galaxies; for example, Alpha Centauri A has the mass of 1.1 suns, and the Milky Way has a mass of approximately 6×1011 M.

Solar mass also has a special use when estimating orbital periods and distances of 2 bodies using Kepler’s lawsa3 = MtotalT2, where a is length of semi-major axis in AUT is orbital period in years and Mtotal is the combined mass of objects in M. In case of planet orbiting a star, Mtotal can be approximated to mean the mass of the central object. More specifically in the case of Sun and Earth the numbers reduce to Mtotal ~ 1, a ~ 1 and T ~ 1.

Time[edit]

Light-distance[edit]

George Gamow discussed measurements of time such as the “light-mile” and “light-foot”, the time taken for light to travel the specified unit distance, defined by “reversing the procedure” used in defining a light-year.[56]

Shake[edit]

In nuclear engineering and astrophysics contexts, the shake is sometimes used as a conveniently short period of time. 1 shake is defined as 10 nanoseconds.[57]

Jiffy[edit]

In computing, the jiffy is the duration of one tick of the system timer interrupt. Typically, this time is 0.01 seconds, though in some earlier systems (such as the Commodore 8-bit machines) the jiffy was defined as ​160 of a second, roughly equal to the vertical refresh period (i.e. the field rate) on NTSC video hardware (and the period of AC electric power in North America).

Microfortnight[edit]

One unit derived from the FFF system of units is the microfortnight, one millionth of the fundamental time unit of FFF, which equals 1.2096 seconds. This is a fairly representative example of “hacker humor“,[58] and is occasionally used in operating systems; for example, the OpenVMS TIMEPROMPTWAIT parameter is measured in microfortnights.[59]

Sidereal day[edit]

The sidereal day is based on the Earth’s rotation rate relative to fixed stars, rather than the Sun. A sidereal day is approximately 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4.0905 SI seconds.

Decimal time systems[edit]

Main article: Decimal time

Decimal Time clock reading 2.50 DT equivalent to 6 AM standard time

The measurement of time is unique in SI in that while the second is the base unit, and measurements of time smaller than a second use prefixed units smaller than a second (e.g. microsecond, nanosecond, etc.), measurements larger than a second instead use traditional divisions, including the sexagesimal-based minute and hour as well as the less regular day and year units.

SI allows for the use of larger prefixed units based on the second, a system known as metric time, but this is seldom used, since the number of seconds in a day (86,400 or, in rare cases, 86,401) negate one of the metric system’s primary advantages: easy conversion by multiplying or dividing by powers of ten.

There have been numerous proposals and usage of decimal time, most of which were based on the day as the base unit, such that the number of units between any two events that happen at the same time of day would be equal to the number of days between them multiplied by some integer power of ten. In dynastic China, the  was a unit that represented ​1100 of a day (it has since been refined to ​196 of a day, or 15 minutes). In France, a decimal time system in place from 1793 to 1805 divided the day into 10 hours, each divided into 100 minutes, in turn each divided into 100 seconds; the French Republican Calendar further extended this by assembling days into ten-day “weeks”. Ordinal dates and Julian days, the latter of which has seen use in astronomy as it is not subject to leap year complications) allow for the expression of a decimal portion of the day.[60] In the mid-1960s, to defeat the advantage of the recently introduced computers for the then popular rally racing in the Midwest, competition lag times in a few events were given in centids (​1100 day, 864 seconds, 14.4 minutes), millids (​11,000 day, 86.4 seconds) and centims (​1100 minute, 0.6 seconds) the latter two looking and sounding a bit like the related units of minutes and seconds. Decimal time proposals are frequently used in fiction, often in futuristic works.

In addition to decimal time, there also exist binary clocks and hexadecimal time.

Sol[edit]

Main article: Sol (day on Mars)Further information: Timekeeping on Mars

The United States-based NASA, when conducting missions to the planet Mars, has typically used a time of day system calibrated to the mean solar day on that planet (known as a “sol”), training those involved on those missions to acclimate to that length of day, which is 88,775 SI seconds, or 2,375 seconds (about 39 minutes) longer than the mean solar day on Earth. NASA’s Martian timekeeping system (instead of breaking down the sol into 25×53×67 or 25×67×53 SI second divisions) slows down clocks so that the 24-hour day is stretched to the length of that on Mars; Martian hours, minutes and seconds are thus 2.75% longer than their SI-compatible counterparts.[61][62]

The Darian calendar is an arrangement of sols into a Martian year. It maintains a seven-sol week (retaining Sunday through Saturday naming customs), with four weeks to a month and 24 months to a Martian year, which contains 668 or 669 sols depending on leap years. The last Saturday of every six months is skipped over in the Darian calendar.

Dog year[edit]

Main article: Aging in dogs

A 10-year-old Neapolitan Mastiff

There are two diametrically opposed definitions of the dog year, primarily used to approximate the equivalent age of dogs and other animals with similar life spans. Both are based upon a popular myth regarding the aging of dogs that states that a dog ages seven years in the time it takes a human to age one year.

  • One seventh of a year, or approximately 52 days.[63] When this definition is used, a standard calendar year is known as a “human year”.
  • A standard (365-day) calendar year of a dog’s life, whereas a “human year” is the period of a dog’s (or other animal’s) life that is claimed to be equivalent to a year of a human being’s life (or seven calendar years).[64]

When these units are used, measurements in both “dog years” and “human years” are often included together, to more clearly indicate which name is used for each unit.[63]

In fact, the aging of a dog varies by breed (larger breeds tend to have shorter lifespans than small and medium-sized breeds); dogs also develop faster and have longer adulthoods relative to their total life span than humans. Most dogs are sexually mature by 1 year old, which corresponds to perhaps 13 years old in humans. Giant dog breeds and bulldogs tend to have the strongest linear correspondence to human aging, with longer adolescences and shorter overall lifespans; such breeds typically age about nine times as fast as humans throughout their lives.[65]

Galactic year[edit]

Main article: Galactic year

The galactic year, GY, is the time it takes the solar system to revolve once around the galactic core, approximately 250 million years (megaannum or “Ma”). It is a convenient unit for long-term measurements. For example, oceans appeared on Earth after 4 GY, life is detectable at 5 GY, and multicellular organisms first appeared at 15 GY. The age of the Earth is estimated at about 20 GY.[66] This use of GY is not to be confused with Gyr for gigayear or Gy for Gray (unit).

KerMetric time[edit]

KerMetric time is a concept that divides the 24-hour day into 100 equal parts called Kermits. Each Kermit is equivalent to 14.4 minutes; the derivative math of (24 hours x 60 minutes/hour )/100. More precise time can be counted by dividing by 1000 or even 10000. The name Kermit came from a combination of the surname of the president of the National Research Council in 1983 (Dr. Larkin Kerwin). The original working model of KerMetric time as conceived by W. Thayer of NRC was assembled by the designated Clock Construction Team of John Phillips, Ron Hawkins, Les Moore and Willie Thayer in 1983.[67]

Moment[edit]

moment was a medieval unit of time. The movement of a shadow on a sundial covered 40 moments in a solar hour. An hour in this case meant one twelfth of the period between sunrise and sunset. The length of a solar hour depended on the length of the day, which in turn varied with the season, so the length of a moment in modern seconds was not fixed, but on average, a moment corresponded to 90 seconds.

Thirds, Fourths[edit]

The term “Minute” usually means ​160 of an hour, coming from “a minute division of an hour”. The term “Second” comes from “the second minute division of an hour”, as it’s ​160 of a minute, or ​160 of ​160 of an hour. While usually sub-second units are represented with SI prefixes on the second (e.g., milliseconds), this system can be extrapolated further, such that a “Third” would mean ​160 of a second, and a “Fourth” would mean ​160 of a third, etc. These units are occasionally used in astronomy to denote angles.[68]

Angular measure[edit]

Furman[edit]

The Furman is a unit of angular measure equal to ​165,536 of a circle, or just under 20 arcseconds. It is named for Alan T. Furman, the American mathematician who adapted the CORDIC algorithm for 16-bit fixed-point arithmetic sometime around 1980.[69] 16 bits give a resolution of 216 = 65,536 distinct angles.

Binary degree, binary radian, brad[edit]

See also: Binary scaling § Binary angles

A related unit of angular measure equal to ​1256 of a circle, represented by 8 bits, has found some use in machinery control where fine precision is not required, most notably crankshaft and camshaft position in internal combustion engine controllers, and in video game programming. There is no consensus as to its name, but it has been called the 8-Bit Furman, the Small Furman, the Furboy and more recently, the miFurman, (milli-binary-Furman). These units are convenient because they form cycles: for the 8-bit unit, the value overflows from 255 to 0 when a full circle has been traversed, so binary addition and subtraction work as expected. Measures are often made using a Gray code, which is trivially converted into more conventional notation.

Grade (also grad, gradian, gon)[edit]

Main article: Grad (angle)

Coordinates were measured in grades on official French terrestrial ordnance charts from the French revolution well into the 20th century. 1 grade (or in modern symbology 1 gon) = 0.9° or 0.01 right angle. One advantage of this measure is that the distance between latitude lines 0.01 gon apart at the equator is almost exactly 1 kilometer (and would be exactly 1 km if the original definition of 1 meter = ​110,000 quarter-meridian had been adhered to). One disadvantage is that common angles like 30° and 60° are expressed by fractional values (33​13 and 66​23 respectively) so this “decimal” unit failed to displace the “sexagesimal” units equilateral-vertex – degree – minute – second invented by Babylonian astronomers.[neutrality is disputed]

Milliradian[edit]

Estimating milliradian by hand

The milliradian (mrad) is an SI derived unit defined as one thousandth of a radian, and has many useful purposes for measuring small angles. Milliradians are specifically used in optics for adjustment and range estimation, but also in general for measurement of small angles within science and technology.

The true milliradian (2000π per turn, or approximately 6283.18 per turn) must not be confused with variations such as the NATO mil (6400 per turn), the Swedish streck (6300 per turn) or the Warsaw Pact mil (6000 per turn), which are used by military organisations for range estimation and translate this map coordinates used for directing artillery fire.[70]

MERU (Milli Earth Rate Unit)[edit]

The MERU, or Milli Earth Rate Unit, is an angular velocity equal to 1/1000 of Earth’s rotation rate. It was introduced by MIT’s Instrumentation Laboratories (now Draper Labs) to measure the performance of inertial navigation systems.[71] One MERU = 7.292115×10−8 radians per second[72] or about 0.2625 milliradians/hour.

Energy[edit]

Electronvolt mass[edit]

Main article: Electronvolt § Mass

It is common in particle physics, where mass and energy are often interchanged, to use eV/c2, where eV (electronvolt) is the kinetic energy of an electron accelerated over one volt (1.6×10−19 joules), c is the speed of light in a vacuum (from E = mc2). This definition is intuitive for a linear particle accelerator when accelerating electrons.1 Da = 931.46 MeV/c2

Even more common is to use a system of natural units with c set to 1, and simply use eV as a unit of mass.[citation needed]

Gasoline gallon equivalent[edit]

Main article: Gasoline gallon equivalent

In 2011 the United States Environmental Protection Agency introduced the gallon gasoline equivalent as a unit of energy because their research showed most U.S. citizens do not understand the standard units. The gallon gasoline equivalent is defined as 33.7 kWh,[73] or about 1.213×108 joules.

Efficiency or fuel economy can be given as miles per gallon gasoline equivalent.

Tons of TNT equivalent[edit]

Main articles: TNT equivalent and Richter magnitude scale § Examples

The energy of various amounts of the explosive TNT (kiloton, megaton, gigaton) is often used as a unit of explosion energy, and sometimes of asteroid impacts and violent explosive volcanic eruptions. One ton of TNT produces 4.184×109 joules, or (by arbitrary definition) exactly 109 thermochemical calories (approximately 3.964×106 BTU). This definition is only loosely based on the actual physical properties of TNT.

Hiroshima bomb and Halifax explosion[edit]

Hiroshima bomb explosion

Halifax explosionMain article: Moment magnitude scale § Nuclear explosions

The energy released by the Hiroshima bomb explosion (about 15 kt TNT equivalent, or 6×1013 J) is often used by geologists as a unit when describing the energy of earthquakesvolcanic eruptions, and asteroid impacts.

Prior to the detonation of the Hiroshima bomb, the size of the Halifax Explosion (about 3 kt TNT equivalent, or 1.26×1013 J), was the standard for this type of relative measurement. Each explosion had been the largest known artificial detonation to date.[74]

Quad[edit]

quad is a unit of energy equal to 1 Q = 1015 BTUs, or approximately 1.055×1018 J (slightly over one exajoule). It is suitably large to quantify energy usage by nations or by the planet as whole using everyday numbers. For example, in 2004, US energy consumption was about 100 Q/year, while demand worldwide was about 400 Q/year.[75]

Foe[edit]

foe is a unit of energy equal to 1044 joules (≈9.478×1040 BTU) that was coined by physicist Gerry Brown of Stony Brook University. To measure the staggeringly immense amount of energy produced by a supernova, specialists occasionally use the “foe”, an acronym derived from the phrase [ten to the power of] fifty-one ergs, or 1051 ergs. This unit of measure is convenient because a supernova typically releases about one foe of observable energy in a very short period of time (which can be measured in seconds).

Other metric-compatible scales[edit]

Power: Ton of refrigeration[edit]

Main article: Ton of refrigeration

The rate at which heat is removed by melting one short ton (910 kg) of ice over twenty-four hours is referred to as a ton of refrigeration, or sometimes a ton of cooling. This unit of refrigeration capacity came from the days when large blocks of ice were used for cooling, and is still used to describe the heat-removal capabilities of refrigerators and chillers today. One ton of refrigeration is equal to 12,000 BTU/h exactly, or 3.517 kW.

Flow: Amazon River[edit]

The volume of discharge of the Amazon River sometimes used to describe large volumes of water flow such as ocean currents. The unit is equivalent to 216,000 m3/s (cumecs).[76]

Flow: Sverdrup[edit]

One Sverdrup (Sv) is equal to 1,000,000 cubic metres per second (264,000,000 USgal/s). It is used almost exclusively in oceanography to measure the volumetric rate of transport of ocean currents.

Energy intensity[edit]

The langley (symbol Ly) is used to measure solar radiation or insolation. It is equal to one thermochemical calorie per square centimetre (4.184×104 J/m2 or ≈3.684 BTU/sq ft) and was named after Samuel Pierpont Langley. Its symbol should not be confused with that for the light-year, ly.

Kinematic viscosity[edit]

One of the few CGS units to see wider use, one stokes (symbol S or St) is a unit of kinematic viscosity, defined as 1 cm2/s, i.e., 10−4 m2/s (≈1.08×10−3 sq ft/s).

Angular velocity[edit]

MERU (Milli Earth Rate Unit), an angular velocity equal to ​11000 of Earth’s rotation rate: 1 MERU = 0.015 degrees/hour ≈ 0.072921 microradian/second. Sometimes used to measure the angular drift rate of an inertial navigation system.[77]

Electromagnetic flux[edit]

In radio astronomy, the unit of electromagnetic flux is the jansky (symbol Jy), equivalent to 10−26 watts per square metre per hertz (= 10−26 kg/s2 in base units, about 8.8×10−31 BTU/ft2). It is named after the pioneering radio astronomer Karl Jansky. The brightest natural radio sources have flux densities of the order of one to one hundred jansky.

Metre of water equivalent[edit]

Main article: Meter water equivalent

A material-dependent unit used in nuclear and particle physics and engineering to measure the thickness of shielding, for example around a nuclear reactorparticle accelerator, or radiation or particle detector. 1 mwe of a material is the thickness of that material that provides the equivalent shielding of one metre (≈39.4 in) of water.

This unit is commonly used in underground science to express the extent to which the overburden (usually rock) shields an underground space or laboratory from cosmic rays. The actual thickness of overburden through which cosmic rays must traverse to reach the underground space varies as a function of direction due to the shape of the overburden, which may be a mountain, or a flat plain, or something more complex like a cliff side. To express the depth of an underground space in mwe (or kmwe for deep sites) as a single number, the convention is to use the depth beneath a flat overburden at sea level that gives the same overall cosmic ray muon flux in the underground location.

Strontium unit: radiation dose[edit]

The strontium unit, formerly known as the Sunshine Unit (symbol S.U.), is a unit of biological contamination by radioactive substances (specifically strontium-90). It is equal to one picocurie of Sr-90 per gram of body calcium. Since about 2% of the human body mass is calcium, and Sr-90 has a half-life of 28.78 years, releasing 6.697+2.282 MeV per disintegration, this works out to about 1.065×10−12 grays per second. The permissible body burden was established at 1,000 S.U.

Banana equivalent dose[edit]

A banana contains naturally occurring radioactive material in the form of potassium-40

Bananas, like most organic material, naturally contain a certain amount of radioactive isotopes—even in the absence of any artificial pollution or contamination. The banana equivalent dose, defined as the additional dose a person will absorb from eating one banana, expresses the severity of exposure to radiation, such as resulting from nuclear weapons or medical procedures, in terms that would make sense to most people. This is approximately 78 nanosieverts – in informal publications one often sees this estimate rounded up to 0.1 μSv.

Molar mass of cellulose[edit]

In the pulp and paper industry, molar mass is traditionally measured with a method where the intrinsic viscosity (dL/g) of the pulp sample is measured in cupriethylenediamine (Cuen). The intrinsic viscosity [η] is related to the weight-average molar mass (in daltons) by the Mark-Houwink equation: [η] = 0.070 Mw0.70.[78] However, it is typical to cite [η] values directly in dL/g, as the “viscosity” of the cellulose, confusingly as it is not a viscosity.

Iodine, bromine and kappa number[edit]

In measuring unsaturation in fatty acids, the traditional method is the iodine number. Iodine adds stoichiometrically to double bonds, so their amount is reported in grams of iodine spent per 100 grams of oil. The standard unit is a dimensionless stoichiometry ratio of moles double bonds to moles fatty acid. A similar quantity, bromine number, is used in gasoline analysis.

In pulp and paper industry, a similar kappa number is used to measure how much bleaching a pulp requires. Potassium permanganate is added to react with the unsaturated compounds (lignin and uronic acids) in the pulp and back-titrated. Originally with chlorine bleaching the required quantity of chlorine could be then calculated, although modern methods use multiple stages. Since the oxidizable compounds are not exclusively lignin and the partially pulped lignin does not have a single stoichiometry, the relation between the kappa number and the precise amount of lignin is inexact.

Demography and epidemiology[edit]

Demography and quantitative epidemiology are statistical fields that deal with counts or proportions of people, or rates of change in these. Counts and proportions are technically dimensionless, and so have no units of measurement, although identifiers such as “people”, “births”, “infections” and the like are used for clarity. Rates of change are counts per unit of time and strictly have inverse time dimensions (per unit of time). In demography and epidemiology expressions such as “deaths per year” are used to clarify what is being measured.

Prevalence, a common measure in epidemiology is strictly a type of denominator data, a dimensionless ratio or proportion. Prevalence may be expressed as a fraction, a percentage or as the number of cases per 1,000, 10,000 or 100,000 in the population of interest.

Micromort[edit]

Main article: Micromort

A micromort is a unit of risk measuring a one-in-a-million probability of death (from micro- and mortality). Micromorts can be used to measure riskiness of various day-to-day activities. A microprobability is a one-in-a million chance of some event; thus a micromort is the microprobability of death. For example, smoking 1.4 cigarettes increases one’s death risk by one micromort, as does traveling 370 km (230 miles) by car.

Numbers of people: Stadium capacities[edit]

To make large numbers of people comprehensible, the capacity of large stadiums is often used. Here the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) is in the process of filling with 100,016 spectators on AFL grand final day in 2010.

The large numbers of people involved in demography are often difficult to comprehend. A useful visualisation tool is the audience capacity of large sports stadiums (often about 100,000). Often the capacity of the largest stadium in a region serves as a unit for a large number of people. For example, Uruguay’s Estadio Centenario is often used in Uruguay,[79][80] while in parts of the United States, Michigan Stadium is used in this manner.[citation needed] In Australia, the capacity of the Melbourne Cricket Ground (about 100,000) is often cited in this manner. Hence the Melbourne Cricket Ground serves as both a measure of people and a unit of volume.[81][82][83]

Struck by lightning[edit]

“Struck by Lightning” is often used to put highly infrequent events into perspective. Among the ~300 million people in the United States, there are ~300 people struck by lightning annually and ~30 killed, making a lightning strike a one in a million event and a death a one in ten million event; given a mean life expectancy of slightly over 75 years, the chances of an American ever being struck in their lifetime is about 1 in 13,000.[84] For example: “A person is about 15 times more likely to be struck by lightning in a given year than to be killed by a stranger with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or chronic psychosis”.[85]

Computer and information science[edit]

The growth of computing has necessitated the creation of many new units, several of which are based on unusual foundations.

Data volume[edit]

A CD-ROM can easily store the entirety of a paper encyclopedia’s words and images, plus audio and video clips

Volume or capacity of data is often compared to various famous works of literature or to large collections of writing. Popular units include bibles, encyclopaediae, the complete works of Shakespeare, and the Library of Congress.

When the Compact Disc began to be used as a data storage device, the CD-ROM, journalists had to compare the disc capacity (650 megabytes) to something everyone could imagine. Since many Western households had a Christian Bible, and the Bible is a comparatively long book, it was often chosen for this purpose. The King James Version of the Bible in uncompressed plain 8-bit text contains about 4.5 million characters,[86] so a CD-ROM can store about 150 Bibles.

The print version of the Encyclopædia Britannica is another common data volume metric. It contains approximately 300 million characters,[87] so two copies would fit onto a CD-ROM and still have 50 megabytes (or about 11 bibles) left over.

The term Library of Congress is often used as an unusual unit of measurement to represent an impressively large quantity of data when discussing digital storage or networking technologies.[citation needed] It refers to the US Library of Congress. Information researchers have estimated that the entire print collections of the Library of Congress represent roughly 10 terabytes of uncompressed textual data.[88]

Nibble[edit]

A measure of quantity of data or information, the “nibble” (sometimes spelled “nybble” or “nybl”) is normally equal to 4 bits, or one half of the common 8-bit byte. The nibble is used to describe the amount of memory used to store a digit of a number stored in binary-coded decimal format, or to represent a single hexadecimal digit. Less commonly, ‘nibble’ may be used for any contiguous portion of a byte of specified length, e.g. “6-bit nibble”; this usage is most likely to be encountered in connection with a hardware architecture in which the word length is not a multiple of 8, such as older 36-bit minicomputers.

FLOPS[edit]

Main article: FLOPS

In computing, FLOPS (FLoating point Operations Per Second) is a measure of a computer’s computing power. It is also common to see measurements of kilo, mega, giga, and teraFLOPS.

It is also used to compare the performance of computers in practice.[89]

BogoMips[edit]

Main article: BogoMips

A measure to determine the CPU speed. It was invented by Linus Torvalds and is nowadays present on every Linux operating system. However, it is not a meaningful measure to assess the actual CPU performance.

KLOC: computer program length[edit]

A computer programming expression, the K-LOC or KLOC, pronounced kay-lok, standing for “kilo-lines of code“, i.e., thousand lines of code. The unit was used, especially by IBM managers,[90] to express the amount of work required to develop a piece of software. Given that estimates of 20 lines of functional code per day per programmer were often used, it is apparent that 1 K-LOC could take one programmer as long as 50 working days, or 10 working weeks. This measure is no longer in widespread use because different computer languages require different numbers of lines to achieve the same result (occasionally the measure “assembly equivalent lines of code” is used, with appropriate conversion factors from the language actually used to assembly language).

Error rates in programming are also measured in “Errors per K-LOC”, which is called the defect density. NASA’s SATC is one of the few organisations to claim zero defects in a large (>500K-LOC) project, for the space shuttle software.

An alternative measurement was defined by Pegasus Mail author David Harris: the “WaP” is equivalent to 71,500 lines of program code, because that number of lines is the length of one edition of Leo Tolstoy‘s War and Peace.[91]

Ticks[edit]

The “tick” is the amount of time between timer interrupts generated by the timer circuit of a CPU. The amount of time is processor-dependent.[92][93]

Purchasing power parity[edit]

Big Mac Index[edit]

Main article: Big Mac Index

A McDonald’s Big Mac hamburger, as advertised in the United States

The Economist‘s Big Mac Index compares the purchasing power parity of countries in terms of the cost of a Big Mac hamburger.[94] This was felt to be a good measure of the prices of a basket of commodities in the local economy including labour, rent, meat, bread, cardboard, advertising, lettuce, etc.

A similar system used in the UK is the ‘Mars bar‘. Tables of prices in Mars Bars have intermittently appeared in newspapers over the last 20 years, usually to illustrate changes in wages or prices over time without the confusion caused by inflation.[95]

Coffee/Latte[edit]

The cost of a cup of coffee (or sometimes latte) from a coffeehouse or cafe is often used as a measurement of two vectors: the relatively diminutive expense of something frivolous, versus the power of collective contributions towards something important. Campaigns implore something to the effect of, “for the cost of a cup of coffee, you can help stamp out diabetes.”[96][97][98]

Other[edit]

Centipawn[edit]

Chess software frequently uses centipawns internally or externally as a unit measuring how strong each player’s situation position is, and hence also by how much one player is beating the other, and how strong a possible move is.[99] 100 centipawns = the value of 1 pawn – more specifically, something like the average value of the pawns at the start of the game, as the actual value of pawns depends on their position. Loss of a pawn will therefore typically lose that player 100 centipawns. The centipawn is often used for comparing possible moves, as in a given position, chess software will often rate the better of two moves within a few centipawns of each other.

Garn[edit]

The garn is NASA’s unit of measure for symptoms resulting from space adaptation syndrome, the response of the human body to weightlessness in space, named after US Senator Jake Garn, who became exceptionally spacesick during an orbital flight in 1985. If an astronaut is completely incapacitated by space adaptation syndrome, he or she is under the effect of one garn of symptoms.[100]

Mother Cow Index[edit]

Formerly used in real estate transactions in the American Southwest, it was the number of pregnant cows an acre of a given plot of land could support. It acted as a proxy for the agricultural quality, natural resource availability, and arability of a parcel of land.[101]

Nines[edit]

Main article: Nine (purity)

troy ounce (31 g) of four nines fine gold (999,9)

Numbers very close to, but below one are often expressed in “nines” (N – not to be confused with the unit newton), that is in the number of nines following the decimal separator in writing the number in question. For example, “three nines” or “3N” indicates 0.999 or 99.9%, “four nines five” or “4N5” is the expression for the number 0.99995 or 99.995%.[102][103][104]

Typical areas of usage are:

  • The reliability of computer systems, that is the ratio of uptime to the sum of uptime and downtime. “Five nines” reliability in a continuously operated system means an average downtime of no more than approximately five minutes per year. (See high availability for a chart.)
  • The purity of materials, such as gases and metals.

Pain[edit]

A woman wincing in painSee also: Pain scaleDolorimeterPain, and Nociception

The dol (from the Latin word for pain, dolor) is a unit of measurement for painJames D. HardyHerbert G. Wolff, and Helen Goodell of Cornell University proposed the unit based on their studies of pain during the 1940s and 1950s. They defined one dol to equal to “just noticeable differences” (jnd‘s) in pain. The unit never came into widespread use and other methods are now used to assess the level of pain experienced by patients.

The Schmidt sting pain index and Starr sting pain index are pain scales rating the relative pain caused by different hymenopteran stings. Schmidt has refined his Schmidt Sting Pain Index (scaled from 1 to 4) with extensive anecdotal experience, culminating in a paper published in 1990 which classifies the stings of 78 species and 41 genera of Hymenoptera. The Starr sting pain scale uses the same 1-to-4 scaling.

Pepper heat[edit]

ASTA pungency unit[edit]

The ASTA (American Spice Trade Associationpungency unit is based on a scientific method of measuring chili pepper “heat”. The technique utilizes high-performance liquid chromatography to identify and measure the concentrations of the various compounds that produce a heat sensation. Scoville units are roughly ​115 the size of pungency units while measuring capsaicin, so a rough conversion is to multiply pungency by 15 to obtain Scoville heat units.[105]

Scoville heat unit[edit]

Chili peppers.

The Scoville scale is a measure of the hotness of a chili pepper. It is the degree of dilution in sugar water of a specific chili pepper extract when a panel of 5 tasters can no longer detect its “heat”.[106] Pure capsaicin (the chemical responsible for the “heat”) has 16 million Scoville heat units.

Proof: alcohol concentration[edit]

A (nearly empty) bottle of 151° proof rum

Up to the 20th century, alcoholic spirits were assessed in the UK by mixing with gunpowder and testing the mixture to see whether it would still burn; spirit that just passed the test was said to be at 100° proof. The UK now uses percentage alcohol by volume at 20 °C (68 °F), where spirit at 100° proof is approximately 57.15% ABV; the US uses a “proof number” of twice the ABV at 60 °F (15.5 °C).[107][108]

Savart[edit]

The Savart is an 18th-century unit for measuring the frequency ratio of two sounds. It is equal to ​11000 of a decade. Still used in some programs, but considered too rough for most purposes.[clarification needed] Cent is preferred.

Telecommunications traffic volume[edit]

Main article: Erlang (unit)

The erlang, named after A. K. Erlang, as a dimensionless unit is used in telephony as a statistical measure of the offered intensity of telecommunications traffic on a group of resources. Traffic of one erlang refers to a single resource being in continuous use, or two channels being at fifty percent use, and so on, pro rata. Much telecommunications management and forecasting software uses this.

Waffle House Index[edit]

Main article: Waffle House Index

Waffle House Index is used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to determine the impact of a storm and the likely scale of assistance required for disaster recovery. The measure is based on the reputation of the Waffle House restaurant chain for staying open during extreme weather. This term was coined by FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate.

X-ray intensity[edit]

Main article: Crab (unit)

The crab is defined as the intensity of X-rays emitted from the Crab Nebula at a given photon energy up to 30 kiloelectronvolts. The Crab Nebula is often used for calibration of X-ray telescopes. For measuring the X-ray intensity of a less energetic source, the milliCrab (mCrab) may be used.

One crab is approximately 24 pW/m2.

File 13

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File 13” is a euphemism for the trash can. The phrase is especially used in the U.S. military, and is less common outside of the United States. In the United Kingdom, for instance, the expression “round file” or “circular file” is more common (in reference to trash cans typically being round). Many Unix-like operating systems have a similar reference known as /dev/null. Expressions such as “I’ll place that memo in file 13” are often heard in offices as a joking way of saying, “I’m going to throw away that memo.” [1]

Contents

History[edit]

The first known citation of “File 13” was in 1941. The phrase’s origins may perhaps be traced to 13 being a supposedly unlucky number, although the exact source is unknown. Another explanation refers to the fact that there are 12 months in the year, and a file is typically kept for each, with the 13th file being non-existent (the garbage can A.K.A the trash can where you throw out garbage.). An explanation given in the NZ military is based on the use of stencil lettering, where a capital B (as used for ‘bin’) looks like a 13. Or the possibility that trash cans were huge.

Usage in popular culture[edit]

File 13 is one of the simple games distributed in Dragon magazine. In this board game, players assume the roles of game publishers and each attempts to develop and market “hot item” games before the others.

There is a song by the band AFI called “File 13,” on the album Very Proud of Ya, which contains the lyric, “Someone should throw me away/Feel like a garbage can.”

File 13 was used as a band moniker by Doug “Double Dee” DiFranco of Double Dee and Steinski and record producer David Witz when they released a 12″ single on Profile Records in 1984 called “Taste So Good.” The track was built with samples from phone sex tapes and too racy for radio airplay although it was a minor hit in dance clubs. Witz revived the File 13 name again in 1988 for a 12″ single called “Party Line” also on Profile Records. This track similarly used samples recorded from party lines which were fairly common in older telephone systems. This track failed to chart or sell well and Witz retired the File 13 name for his dance tracks.

In the band A-ha‘s music video for “Take On Me“, the band is depicted as characters in a comic book which is being read in a cafe by the female protagonist. In the video, the comic book comes to life and she is pulled into its world. The waitress at the cafe, thinking she has left without paying, angrily crumples the comic book up and throws it in the trash. Subsequent to this, the band and the girl are pursued in the comic book world by sinister characters in hard hats that have the number “13” printed on them.