Scale (Measurement)

A scale is either a weighing scale used for measurement of weight (mass or force), or a series of ratios against which different measurements can be compared. The latter need not always be a linear ratio, and is often logarithmic. A draughtsman's scale is a ruler-like device, often with a triangular cross-section, that permits him to represent items in the same relative dimensions. The scale of a map or enlarged or reduced model indicates the ratio between the distances on the map or model and the corresponding distances in reality or the original. E.g. a map of scale 1:50,000 shows a distance of 50,000 cm (=500 m) as 1 cm on a map, and a model on a scale 1:25 of a building with a height of 30 m has a model height of 1.20 m. In model railways a number of standard scales are indicated by letters and numbers such as "G", "O", "HO", "N" and "Z". Scales with special uses are often named after the person who invented them.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
conjunction (astronomy)
axel oxenstierna
religious humanism
racial quota
horus
bayeux tapestry
seth
jefferson national expansion memorial
boolean logic
upper and lower egypt
legend of osiris and isis
instruction pipelining
das rheingold
volatilisation
kings cross
divisor
pascal's triangle
icp ms
die walkre
siegfried (opera)
bernhard von reesen
henri lebesgue
transportation (disambiguation)
anwar sadat
bayreuth
jula
baen free library
battle of milvian bridge
thought experiment
link topology
junichiro koizumi
hyperlink
katsura taro
rugby school
savonlinna
batholith
castle
yalu river
nicolae ceausescu
president pro tempore of the united states senate
montgomery
bayes' theorem
bayesian inference
hooliganism