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Kilo, Mega, Giga --- Soon Tera and Penta

By: Jake Solochek

My wife looks at computers like buildings.



"A room is like kilo. That's one thousand. That's like the number of things in a small picture."



So far, so good. A small photo might be 2000 bytes or 2 kb in a email format or a fast-loading logo on a web site.



"If I take a really complicated photo, that's like a hotel with one thousand rooms. It becomes mega. That's a million of those pieces."



Great analogy. Some of these 5-megapixel cameras create photos that are 2000 kilobytes or 2 million bytes or 2 megabytes.



"So I guess Giga must be REALLY big, so it's like a city of hotels or skyscrapers."



Well done! A gigabyte is indeed one thousand megabytes or one thousand times one million. A DVD with 4 Gigs (4000 megabytes) can store 200 short videos from a cruise. Or 2000 photos that are 2 megabytes each. And that should be enough space for this traveler's videos! I'd have to take 250 cruises to reach a terabyte of videos.



As a math teacher, I look for these sorts of scales to show my students that girls can do math, too. Being able to talk "computer" means more than saying "Here's a hard drive and it's connected to a CPU." It also means knowing the scale of speed (kilohertz or megahertz?) and size of storage (megabytes or gigabytes?). It means room - skyscraper - city, the way my wife is starting to see the world of kilo - mega - giga. And a world with a thousand cities (tera) certainly will need to cover La Tierra (which is a way of thinking about one trillion).



What's after that? It's the fifth in the series, so it's like "penta"... but it's called "peta": I'm not ready for a petabyte of space!

The following measurements come from http://www.cleavebooks.co.uk/dictunit/notesp.htm



peta P = 10^15 = 1 000 000 000 000 000 (quadrillion)

tera T = 10^12 = 1 000 000 000 000 (trillion)

giga G = 10^9 = 1 000 000 000 (billion)

mega M = 10^6 = 1 000 000

kilo k = 10^3 = 1 000



deci d = 10^-1 = 0.1

centi c = 10^-2 = 0.01

milli m = 10^-3 = 0.001

micro µ = 10^-6 = 0.000 001 (one-millionth)

nano n = 10^-9 = 0.000 000 001 (one-billionth)

pico p = 10^-12 = 0.000 000 000 001 (one-trillionth)



Steve McCrea

http://www.kilomegagiga.com

http://www.roadlovers.com Comfort travel

Article Source: Free Content Articles Directory

Why not write to me at mistermath@comcast.net? I seek other examples to help my students imagine a world with terabytes and petagrams (wow, that's heavy).

www.kilomegagiga.com

guymal.com/techCorner/powers.shtml
www.roadlovers.com
www.cleavebooks.co.uk/dictunit/notesp.htm


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