Micrometre
The micrometre is a unit of length in the International System of Units equalling ; that is, one millionth of a metre. Also known as a micron.
The nearest smaller common SI unit is the nanometre, equivalent to one thousandth of a micrometre, one millionth of a millimetre or one billionth of a metre.
The micrometre is a common unit of measurement for wavelengths of infrared radiation as well as sizes of biological cells and bacteria, and for grading wool by the diameter of the fibres. The width of a single human hair ranges from approximately 20 to.
Examples
Between 1 μm and 10 μm:- 1–10 μm – length of a typical bacterium
- 3–8 μm – width of strand of spider web silk
- 5 μm – length of a typical human spermatozoon's head
- 6–8 μm – diameter of a typical red blood cell
- 10 μm – size of fungal hyphae
- about 10 μm – size of a fog, mist, or cloud water droplet
- about 10–12 μm – thickness of plastic wrap
- 10 to 55 μm – width of wool fibre
- 17 to 181 μm – diameter of human hair
- 70 to 180 μm – thickness of paper
SI standardization
In the SI, the systematic name micrometre became the official name of the unit, and μm became the official unit symbol.
In American English, the use of micron may help to differentiate the unit from the micrometer, a measuring device, because the unit's name in American spelling is a homograph of the device's name. In spoken English, they are distinguished by pronunciation, as the name of the measuring device is stressed on the second syllable, whereas the unit name places the stress on the first syllable.
The plural of micron is normally microns, though micra was occasionally used before 1950.
Symbol
The official symbol for the SI prefix micro- is a Greek lowercase mu. Unicode has inherited from ISO/IEC 8859-1, distinct from the code point. According to the Unicode Consortium, the Greek letter character is preferred, but implementations must recognize the micro sign as well for compatibility with legacy character sets. Most fonts use the same glyph for the two characters.Before desktop publishing became commonplace, it was customary to render the symbol μ in texts produced with mechanical typewriters by combining a slightly lowered slash with the letter. For example, "15 μm" would appear as "". This gave rise in early word processing to substituting just the letter for the symbol if the Greek letter μ was not available, as in "".
The Unicode CJK Compatibility block contains square forms of some Japanese katakana measure and currency units.
corresponds to ミクロン.