Physics Student Petitions For "Hella" to Be Nex SI Unit Prefix

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 - 10:15 in Physics & Chemistry

Beloved by Bay Area natives and loathed by the rest of the country, the term "hella" has entered the general American lexicon thanks to the combined efforts of No Doubt and South Park. And now, if University of California, Davis, physics student Austin Sendek gets enough signatures, it might enter the scientific dictionary as the prefix for numbers with 10^27 zeroes. The International System of Units (SI) provides standards for scientific weights and measurements, like Kelvin and the mole, as well as the prefixes for naming quantities of different magnitudes. Thanks to advances in computing speed and storage, high order prefixes like peta-, giga-, and even yotta- have become familiar to lay people, as well as scientists. Primarily, those prefixes come from the Greek word for a particular number. That's where Austin Sendek's petition comes in. Currently, the SI prefixes stop at 10^24, or yotta. Sendek selected 10^27 for hella-, rather...

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