I assume you mean units of length. The official (worldwide) unit for that is the meter. Multiples and submultiples are often used, such as kilometer, millimeter, or micrometer.
You write it as 1m2
Meter is usually abbreviated with "m" , so one meter would be 1 m.
0.02 meters.
m2
There are smaller masses but they need not be submultiples.
The cubic meter. Also, multiples and submultiples are often used, such as the cubic kilometer, the cubic decimeter (= liter) and the cubic centimeter (= milliliter).
I assume you mean units of length. The official (worldwide) unit for that is the meter. Multiples and submultiples are often used, such as kilometer, millimeter, or micrometer.
micro second * * * * * No, that is a submultiple of a measurement unit of time - a second. Not of time itself. Time has no submultiples.
The meter, or multiples/submultiples thereof, such as kilometer, millimeter, micrometer, etc. (multiples larger than "kilo", such as mega or giga, are not commonly used with meters.)
Prefix 'deci' is used to denote submultiples of meter and uses factor 10-1 or 0.1 Conversion formula: 18 meters = 18 / 0.1 = 180 decimeters
In physics, multiples refer to values that are greater than a specified quantity, while submultiples refer to values that are smaller than a specified quantity. For example, a kilometer is a multiple of a meter (1000 meters make a kilometer), while a centimeter is a submultiple of a meter (100 centimeters make a meter).
You write it as 1m2
Write the number of square meters, then just put a small 2 on the upper-right hand corner of the number.
Meter is usually abbreviated with "m" , so one meter would be 1 m.
Yes - m3 is the same as cu m
The prefix is used for the name of multiples and submultiples.