Femtometer
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The femtometre (American spelling femtometer, symbol fm) (Danish: femten, "fifteen"; Ancient Greek: μέτρον, metrοn, "unit of measurement") is an SI unit of length equal to 10−15 metres. This distance can also be called fermi and was so named in honour of Enrico Fermi and is often encountered in nuclear physics as a characteristic of this scale. The symbol for the fermi is also fm.[1][2][3]
Definition and equivalents
1 femtometre = 1.0 x 10−15 metres = 1 fermi = 0.001 picometre = 1000 attometres
1,000,000 femtometers = 1 nanometer.
For example, the diameter of a gold nucleus is approximately 8.45 femtometres.
History
The femtometre was adopted by the 11th Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures, and added to SI in 1964.
The fermi is named after the Italian physicist Enrico Fermi (1901–1954), one of the founders of nuclear physics. The term was coined by Robert Hofstadter in a 1956 paper published in Reviews of Modern Physics entitled "Electron Scattering and Nuclear Structure".[4] The term is widely used by nuclear and particle physicists. When Hofstadter was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Physics, it subsequently appears in the text of his 1961 Nobel Lecture, "The electron-scattering method and its application to the structure of nuclei and nucleons" (December 11, 1961).[5]
References
- ^ http://metricsystemconversion.info/fermi-to-femtometer-fm.html?func=detail
- ^ http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictF.html
- ^ http://www.hep.phys.soton.ac.uk/hepwww/staff/D.Ross/phys3002/diffraction.pdf
- ^ Hofstadter, Robert, Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, "Electron Scattering and Nuclear Structure," Rev. Mod. Phys. 28, 214–254 (1956) © 1956 The American Physical Society
- ^ Hofstadter, Robert, "The electron-scattering method and its application to the structure of nuclei and nucleons," Nobel Lecture (December 11, 1961)