Units, Prefixes and Homogeneous Equations
Specification: OCR A H556 | Section: 2.1 Physical quantities and units | Focus: SI base units, derived units, prefixes, conversions, standard form, and checking equations by dimensional consistency
- name the SI base quantities and their units
- write common derived units in base-unit form
- convert confidently between prefixes and units
- use standard form sensibly in unit conversions
- check whether an equation is homogeneous
- explain what homogeneity can and cannot prove
Big idea: units are not just labels. They are a quick way to check whether a line of physics makes sense.
Physical quantities, units and why they matter
A physical quantity has a number and a unit. For example, 3.2 m or 12 s.
Units matter because they tell you what the number means. Saying “the distance is 5” is incomplete. Saying “the distance is 5 m” is a usable physics statement.
Always include units in calculations, graph labels and final answers unless the quantity is genuinely unitless.
SI base units
OCR A lists these SI base quantities and units:
| Base quantity | Unit name | Unit symbol |
|---|---|---|
| Mass | kilogram | kg |
| Length | metre | m |
| Time | second | s |
| Current | ampere | A |
| Temperature | kelvin | K |
| Amount of substance | mole | mol |
Students often try to treat newton, joule or watt as base units. They are derived units.
Derived units
Derived units are built from base units.
| Quantity | Unit | Base-unit form |
|---|---|---|
| Velocity | m s−1 | m s−1 |
| Acceleration | m s−2 | m s−2 |
| Momentum | kg m s−1 | kg m s−1 |
| Density | kg m−3 | kg m−3 |
| Force | N | kg m s−2 |
| Energy | J | kg m2 s−2 |
| Power | W | kg m2 s−3 |
| Pressure | Pa | kg m−1 s−2 |
Being able to switch between named units and base-unit form is very useful for checking equations.
Prefixes and powers of ten
Prefixes are shortcuts for powers of ten. They are closely linked to standard form.
| Prefix | Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| pico | p | 10−12 |
| nano | n | 10−9 |
| micro | μ | 10−6 |
| milli | m | 10−3 |
| centi | c | 10−2 |
| deci | d | 10−1 |
| kilo | k | 103 |
| mega | M | 106 |
| giga | G | 109 |
| tera | T | 1012 |
For example, 4.7 ms = 4.7 × 10−3 s and 3.2 kV = 3.2 × 103 V.
m can mean metre or the prefix milli. Context matters. For example, m s−1 means metres per second, but ms means millisecond.
How to convert between units and prefixes
A reliable method is:
- convert the starting value into base units using powers of ten
- convert from base units into the target unit
Example: 7.5 ms to s
Example: 0.0042 kV to V
When moving from a small unit to a larger unit, the number usually gets smaller. When moving from a large unit to a smaller unit, the number usually gets bigger.
What does homogeneous mean?
An equation is homogeneous if both sides have the same base units.
Example: F = ma
Right side: ma = kg × m s−2 = kg m s−2
The units match, so the equation is homogeneous.
Why this is useful
- it helps catch algebra mistakes
- it helps check whether an equation could be right
- it builds confidence in rearranging equations
What homogeneity cannot prove
Passing a homogeneity check does not prove that an equation is physically correct.
Correct units, wrong physics
E = mv2 has the same units as energy, but the correct kinetic energy equation is E = 1/2 mv2.
Missing constants
An equation can have the right units but still be missing a constant or numerical factor.
Direction and meaning
Units do not tell you everything about vectors, signs, or whether the model makes physical sense.
If the units match, say the equation is dimensionally consistent or homogeneous. Do not say this proves the equation is definitely correct.
Unit converter and homogeneity checker
Step 1: 3.2 mV = 3.2 × 10−3 V. Step 2: so the answer is 0.0032 V.
Worked examples
Knowledge Check
- Any two from mass kg, length m, time s, current A, temperature K, amount of substance mol
- μ
- Both sides have the same base units / dimensions
- Matching units do not prove an equation is physically correct
Exam-Style Questions
- A measurable property with a numerical value and a unit
a) Write this in volts. [1 mark]
b) Write this in millivolts. [2 marks]
- a) 2.6 kV = 2600 V
- b) 2600 V = 2.6 × 106 mV
a) force [1 mark]
b) energy [1 mark]
c) power [1 mark]
- a) kg m s−2
- b) kg m2 s−2
- c) kg m2 s−3
- milli means 10−3, not 103
- 7.2 ms = 0.0072 s
- Momentum has units kg m s−1
- mv has units kg × m s−1 = kg m s−1
- So the equation is homogeneous
a) Show that this equation is not homogeneous. [3 marks]
b) State the correct base units of power. [1 mark]
- a) F has units kg m s−2
- Ft has units kg m s−2 × s = kg m s−1
- Power has units kg m2 s−3, so units do not match
- b) kg m2 s−3
a) 4.5 μs into s [1 mark]
b) 0.008 m into mm [1 mark]
c) 3.6 × 109 Hz into GHz [1 mark]
- a) 4.5 × 10−6 s
- b) 8 mm
- c) 3.6 GHz
- It shows that both sides have consistent units
- This means the equation could be correct
- But an equation can have the right units and still be missing a constant or have the wrong physical relationship
Topic Summary
Base units
Learn the SI base quantities and units exactly.
Prefixes
Think in powers of ten, and use standard form when it keeps working clear.
Derived units
Break named units into base-unit form when checking equations.
Homogeneity
Matching units is necessary for a correct equation, but not sufficient.