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Femtometre
View on Wikipedia| Femtometre | |
|---|---|
The helium atom and perspective magnitudes | |
| General information | |
| Unit system | SI |
| Unit of | length |
| Symbol | fm |
| Conversions | |
| 1 fm in ... | ... is equal to ... |
| SI base units | 1×10−15 m |
| Natural units | 6.1877×1019 ℓP 1.8897×10−5 a0 |
| imperial/US units | 3.9370×10−14 in |
The femtometre (American spelling femtometer), symbol fm,[1][2] (derived from the Danish and Norwegian word femten 'fifteen', Ancient Greek: μέτρον, romanized: metron, lit. 'unit of measurement') is a unit of length in the International System of Units (SI) equal to 10−15 metres, which means a quadrillionth of one metre. This distance is sometimes called a fermi and was so named in honour of Italian naturalized to American physicist Enrico Fermi, as it is a typical length-scale of nuclear physics.
Definition and equivalents
[edit]1000000 zeptometres = 1 femtometre = 1 fermi = 0.000001 nanometre = 10−15 metres
1000000000000 femtometres = 1 millimetre.
For example, the charge radius of a proton is approximately 0.841 femtometres[3] while the radius of a gold nucleus is approximately 8.45 femtometres.[4]
1 barn = 100 fm2
History
[edit]The femtometre was adopted by the 11th Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures, and added to the SI in 1964, using the Danish word for "15" and the similarity in spelling with fermi.
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".[5] The term is widely used by nuclear and particle physicists. When Hofstadter was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Physics, it subsequently appeared 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).[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Units: F". Unc.edu. Archived from the original on 2018-07-09. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^ "Nuclear Size and Shape" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2012-04-25.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "The Case of the Shrinking Proton | Perimeter Institute". Perimeterinstitute.ca. 2013-08-23. Archived from the original on 2014-04-23. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^ Blatt, John M.; Weisskopf, Victor F. (1952), Theoretical Nuclear Physics, New York: Wiley, pp. 14–16.
- ^ Hofstadter, Robert, Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, "Electron Scattering and Nuclear Structure," Rev. Mod. Phys. 28, 214–254 (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)
Femtometre
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Notation
Core Definition
The femtometre (symbol: fm) is a metric unit of length in the International System of Units (SI), defined as exactly one quadrillionth of a metre, or .[6] This definition arises from the application of the SI prefix "femto-" to the base unit of length, the metre, ensuring coherence within the SI system where no conversion factors other than powers of ten are required between units.[7] As a coherent derived unit for length, the femtometre facilitates precise measurements in domains where standard atomic-scale units, such as the ångström (), prove too coarse.[8] It is essential for quantifying subatomic phenomena, including nuclear dimensions and particle interactions, where scales on the order of femtometres dominate.[8] The term "femtometre" combines the SI prefix "femto-," derived from the Danish-Norwegian word for "fifteen" to denote the exponent , with "metre," the SI base unit of length.[9] This etymology aligns with the systematic naming convention for SI prefixes, emphasizing the decimal submultiple factor.[9]Symbol and Prefix Rules
The femtometre, as a derived unit in the International System of Units (SI), employs the prefix "femto-" with the symbol "f" to denote a factor of when combined with the metre (m).[10] According to the SI Brochure, this prefix multiplies the base unit by , forming the compound symbol "fm" for femtometre, which is printed in upright (roman) typeface and not italicized.[10] Rules for notation specify that the prefix symbol attaches directly to the unit symbol without a space, and the full unit symbol follows the numerical value without intervening space, such as 2.4 fm.[10] Unit symbols like "fm" are not pluralized, regardless of the quantity; thus, both one femtometre and several femtometres are written as 1 fm or 5 fm.[10] In textual descriptions, the unit name is spelled "femtometre" in British English or "femtometer" in American English, with the prefix "femto-" integrated as a single word; in running text, unit symbols are used following numerical values (e.g., 2.4 fm), while spelled-out names are preferred in narrative prose, following SI guidelines for clarity.[11][10] Correct usage in equations adheres to these conventions, ensuring consistency in scientific writing. For instance, a nuclear radius might be expressed as , where fm, with the unit symbol placed after the value and in upright font.[10]Equivalents and Conversions
Relation to Other Length Units
The femtometre occupies a specific position in the hierarchy of SI length prefixes, situated between the picometre ( m) and the attometre ( m).[6] This placement reflects its role in expressing lengths on the order of m, facilitating precise measurements in subatomic contexts.[1] Key conversions from the femtometre to other common length units include: 1 fm = nm (nanometres), 1 fm = pm (picometres), and 1 fm = cm (centimetres). In non-metric systems, 1 fm ≈ inches. Relative to atomic units, 1 fm ≈ , where the Bohr radius m.[12] The general conversion formula between femtometres and metres is (fm) = (m) .[6]| Unit | Conversion Factor from 1 fm |
|---|---|
| Nanometre (nm) | nm |
| Picometre (pm) | pm |
| Centimetre (cm) | cm |
| Inch (in) | ≈ in |
| Bohr radius () | ≈ |
Comparisons to Natural Scales
The femtometre scale aligns with subatomic phenomena; for instance, it is vastly smaller than the wavelengths of visible light, which span 400–700 nm (or to fm), rendering direct optical observation impossible.[13] Similarly, typical virus particles measure 20–300 nm ( to fm) in diameter, highlighting the femtometre's confinement to the realm beyond biological microscopy.[14] At this scale, femtometres become relevant to exotic states of matter, such as the quark-gluon plasma formed in heavy-ion collisions, where interaction lengths and droplet sizes are on the order of several femtometres.[15] Femtometre structures evade conventional imaging technologies, as the resolution limit of advanced electron microscopes is approximately 0.05 nm ( fm), insufficient for direct visualization of nuclear interiors.[16] Instead, these scales are inferred through indirect methods like high-energy scattering experiments, which probe sub-femtometre interactions via particle deflection patterns.[17] To grasp the femtometre's minuteness intuitively, consider that 1 fm equates to roughly the width of a human hair—typically 50–100 μm or to fm—divided by about 10 billion, emphasizing its position at the frontier of measurable physical reality.[18]Historical Development
Origin of the Femto Prefix
The "femto" prefix originates from the Danish and Norwegian word femten, meaning "fifteen," which corresponds to its role in denoting the fifteenth negative power of ten (10^{-15}) within the decimal-based system of metric prefixes. This etymology breaks from the classical Greek and Latin roots used for most other SI prefixes, opting instead for a modern Scandinavian term to extend the nomenclature for extremely small scales.[9] The prefix was coined in 1962 by Danish physicist Henning Højgaard Jensen, who proposed it—initially somewhat in jest—to address the need for standardized notation in subatomic measurements, particularly in nuclear physics where scales around 10^{-15} meters were increasingly studied. Jensen's suggestion aligned with ongoing efforts to expand the metric system beyond the then-existing submultiples like pico (10^{-12}).[19][20] Femto was formally established as part of the International System of Units (SI) at the 12th General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in 1964, through Resolution 8, which added it alongside "atto" (10^{-18}) to balance the prefix set for submultiples. This adoption occurred four years after the 11th CGPM in 1960 had introduced the SI framework and added prefixes like nano and pico, reflecting the rapid evolution of measurement needs in post-war science. Prior to this, informal references to 10^{-15} in 1950s physics literature occasionally employed "femto" experimentally, drawing from earlier non-standard prefix conventions such as "myria" for larger scales, though the unit "fermi" remained prevalent for nuclear radii.[1]Introduction in Scientific Usage
The femtometre, originally referred to as the "fermi" unit equivalent to 10^{-13} cm, emerged prominently in nuclear physics during the 1950s as researchers probed atomic nuclei at scales around 1 fm. Influential experiments, such as those conducted by Robert Hofstadter at Stanford University using high-energy electron scattering, provided early measurements of nuclear charge distributions and sizes, with proton root-mean-square radii determined to be approximately 0.8 × 10^{-13} cm (or 0.8 fm).[21] These works implied fm-scale structures for nucleons and nuclei, shifting analyses from macroscopic units to this microscopic regime, though notation remained ad hoc, often expressed as powers of 10^{-13} cm in journals like Physical Review. Similarly, estimates of fundamental lengths, such as the charged pion Compton wavelength of ≈1.4 fm (derived from the pion rest mass of ≈140 MeV/c² and ħc ≈ 197 MeV fm), appeared in 1950s nuclear physics literature to contextualize meson exchange and nuclear forces. (for pion mass measurements in the era) Following the formal approval of the femto- prefix by the 12th Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures in 1964, which defined it as 10^{-15} for SI units, the femtometre (fm) began its adoption in scientific notation during the late 1960s. This standardization aligned with the International System of Units (SI), facilitating consistent reporting in high-precision experiments and theoretical models. Nuclear physicists transitioned from the informal "fermi" to the SI symbol fm, particularly as computational tools and accelerators enabled finer resolutions of nuclear interiors. By the early 1970s, the fm had become widespread in analyses of scattering data, including Rutherford scattering interpretations that quantified nuclear radii and charge distributions at fm scales, solidifying its role in peer-reviewed publications such as Physical Review. (example of 1970s Rutherford analysis in fm units) This evolution marked a key milestone in metrology for particle and nuclear physics, where the fm provided a natural scale for phenomena like nucleon interactions and nuclear binding, bridging experimental observations with quantum field theory predictions. The shift to standardized fm notation enhanced interoperability across global research efforts, as evidenced by its routine use in seminal reviews and data compilations by the mid-1970s.Applications in Physics
Nuclear Structure Measurements
The nuclear radius in the liquid drop model is empirically described by the formula , where is the mass number and fm represents the constant characterizing the nuclear density.[22] This relation arises from modeling the nucleus as an incompressible liquid drop with constant density, such that the nuclear volume scales proportionally with , leading to the cubic root dependence on mass number.[23] The value of is derived from semi-empirical mass formula fits to binding energies and scattering data, providing a baseline for estimating nuclear sizes across isotopes.[24] Measurement of nuclear charge radii, which probe the proton distribution, relies on techniques sensitive to electromagnetic interactions at femtometre scales. Elastic electron scattering determines charge radii by analyzing differential cross sections, revealing form factors that Fourier-transform the nuclear charge density.[25] Muon capture and muonic atom spectroscopy exploit the muon's orbit closer to the nucleus compared to electrons, enhancing sensitivity to nuclear size through shifts in x-ray transitions or capture rates.[26] Pion photoproduction, involving threshold reactions, probes both charge and matter radii by studying coherent production cross sections that depend on nuclear coherence lengths around 1-2 fm.[27] For example, the root-mean-square charge radius of the nucleus is approximately 2.47 fm, consistent with electron scattering and muonic measurements.[28] Specific femtometre-scale properties highlight the precision of these methods in nuclear structure. The proton charge radius, a fundamental benchmark, measures ≈0.84 fm from muonic hydrogen spectroscopy (as of 2022 CODATA), where Lamb shift measurements have converged across methods.[29] In heavy nuclei like , the neutron skin thickness—defined as the difference between neutron and proton root-mean-square radii—is ≈0.2 fm (as of 2023), extracted from parity-violating electron scattering that isolates weak charge contributions.[30] These values reflect isovector deformations driven by neutron excess, with uncertainties of approximately 0.06 fm enabling tests of nuclear equation-of-state models.[31] Variations in charge radii across isotopes, often differing by 0.1-0.3 fm, serve as signatures of shell structure by indicating changes in mean-field occupancy. Kinks or plateaus in radius isotope shifts occur at magic neutron numbers (e.g., N=28 in calcium isotopes), where added neutrons fill closed shells without significantly expanding the proton distribution.[32] In tin isotopes near Z=50, femtometre-scale radius anomalies reveal subtle shell closures, correlating with enhanced stability and altered single-particle energies.[33] Such differences, measurable via laser spectroscopy or scattering, provide empirical constraints on shell-model interactions and deformation effects.[34]High-Energy Particle Interactions
In high-energy particle physics, the femtometre scale is fundamental to the residual strong nuclear force, which governs interactions between hadrons at distances of approximately 1 to 2 fm, arising from the underlying strong interactions between their constituent quarks and gluons.[35] This short range arises primarily from the exchange of light mesons, such as pions, with the lightest pion mass of about 140 MeV/c² yielding a characteristic length scale of ħc / (m_π c²) ≈ 1.4 fm, where ħ is the reduced Planck's constant and c is the speed of light. At these distances, the strong force is roughly 100 times stronger than the electromagnetic force, enabling it to overcome electromagnetic repulsion and bind protons and neutrons within nuclei. In high-energy collisions, such as proton-proton or heavy-ion interactions at facilities like the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), relativistic particles with very short de Broglie wavelengths (much less than 1 fm) probe these subnuclear dynamics through high-momentum transfers.[36][37] A primary method for investigating femtometre-scale interactions is femtoscopy, which exploits quantum interference effects in the wave functions of particle pairs emitted from the collision source. By analyzing two-particle correlation functions—typically for identical bosons like pions or kaons—researchers extract the spatial extent (radius) and temporal duration of the emitting region, often measuring 0.5 to 2 fm in heavy-ion collisions. This technique, rooted in the Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry originally developed for stellar astronomy, has been adapted for relativistic heavy-ion physics to map the evolution of quark-gluon plasma, a state where quarks and gluons interact freely over femtometre volumes before hadronizing. Seminal applications include studies of pion source sizes in lead-lead collisions, revealing homogeneity lengths of about 1 fm at kinetic freeze-out.[38][39] Femtoscopy has also enabled precise measurements of residual strong interactions between hadrons post-hadronization, such as proton-Ω⁻ and proton-Λ correlations, providing scattering lengths that quantify interaction strengths at low relative momenta (below 20 MeV/c). For instance, the ALICE collaboration's analysis of proton-hyperon femtoscopy indicates attractive forces comparable to nucleon-nucleon interactions and informs lattice QCD predictions for multi-body strong dynamics. These results highlight how high-energy experiments resolve femtometre-scale effects, bridging perturbative QCD at short distances (<0.1 fm) with non-perturbative hadronization processes. Quantitative cross-sections from such studies underscore the force's role in hypernuclear physics without exhaustive enumeration of all pair combinations.[40][41]References
- https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Unit_4:_Eukaryotic_Microorganisms_and_Viruses/10:_Viruses/10.02:_Size_and_Shapes_of_Viruses
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/femto-