Ma (unit) 

Annum is one form of the Latin noun meaning year, not a form normally used for derivatives in modern languages: the accusative singular of the second declension masculine noun annus (nominative), anni (genitive singular and nominative plural).

As a unit of time, it is defined as exactly 365.25 days (that is, the average length of a year in the Julian calendar) of 86,400 SI seconds each, representing the duration of one revolution of the Earth around the Sun. Although there is no universally accepted symbol for the year, NIST SP8111 and ISO 80000-3:20062 suggest the symbol a (in the International System of Units a is also the symbol for the are unit of area, but context is usually enough to disambiguate). In English, the deprecated[1] abbreviation yr is still used informally.3

The Unified Code for Units of Measure4 disambiguates the varying symbologies of ISO 1000, ISO 2955 and ANSI X3.50 [2] by using

ar for are (unit), and:
at = a_t = 365.24219 days for the mean tropical year
aj = a_j = 365.25 days for the mean Julian year
ag = a_g = 365.2425 days for the mean Gregorian year
a = 1 aj year (without further qualifier)

Contents

Multiples of an "annum"

Deprecated units

These are deprecated units.citation needed Except for kyr they do not use accepted SI prefixes. Further, the suffixes ya and yr are not accepted SI units for time. However ya would be the symbol for the yoctoannum unit of time. 1 ya would be 10-24 a which would be about of 3.15 x 10-17 s.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ambler Thompson, Barry N. Taylor. "National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication 811", Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI), para 8.1, (2008)
  2. ^ International Organization for Standardization ISO 80000-3:2006, Quantities and units - Part 3: Space and time, Geneva, Switzerland (2006)
  3. ^ North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature"North American Stratigraphic Code" Article 13 (c)
  4. ^ Gunther Schadow, Clement J. McDonald "Unified Code for Units of Measure"
  5. ^ Testing the physics of nuclear isomers Eurekalert (August 2005)