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Meter, unit of measure |
abbr. m, fundamental unit of length in the metric system. The meter was originally defined as 1/10,000,000 of the distance between the equator and either pole; however, the original survey was inaccurate and the meter was later defined simply as the distance between two scratches on a bar made of a platinum-iridium alloy and kept at Sevres, France, near Paris. More recently, it has been defined as the distance light travels through a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second. The meter is now the legal standard of length for most of the world, other standards, such as the yard, being defined in terms of the meter. |
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Convert meter to: exameter, petameter, terameter, gigameter, megameter, kilometer, hectometer, dekameter, decimeter, centimeter, millimeter, micrometer, micron, nanometer, picometer, femtometer, attometer, megaparsec, kiloparsec, parsec, light year, astronomical unit, league, nautical league (UK), nautical league (international), league (statute), mile, nautical mile (UK), nautical mile (international), mile (statute), mile (US survey), mile (Roman), kiloyard, furlong, furlong (US survey), chain, chain (US survey), rope, rod, rod (US survey), perch, pole, fathom, fathom (US survey), ell, yard, foot, foot (US survey), link, link (US survey), cubit (UK), hand, span (cloth), finger (cloth), nail (cloth), inch, inch (US survey), barleycorn, mil, microinch, angstrom, a.u. of length, X-unit, fermi, arpent, pica, point, twip, aln, famn, caliber, centiinch, ken, Russian archin, Roman actus, vara de tarea, vara conuquera, vara castellana, cubit (Greek), long reed, reed, long cubit, handbreadth, fingerbreadth, Planck length, Electron radius (classical), Bohr radius, Earth's equatorial radius, Earth's polar radius, Earth's distance from sun, Sun's radius
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