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Words: | Submitted: Tue Jun 20 2006
... We examine this problem using our solutions [1]. II. Philosophy of Basic Concepts of Measures A. As is well known, physical measurement of a quantity A is the comparison expressed by the relation Ar = A / EA. Here, A is an absolute composite multiplicative measure equal to the product of components A1, A2, ..., An (which are not necessarily have to be elementary) of this measure, A = A1 · A2 ··· An; Ar = A1r · A2r ···Anr is an relative composite measure; EA = EA1 · EA2 ··· EAn is a composite unit of measurement. Thus, the absolute measure M(A) of the physical quantity A is equal to the product M(A) = Ar · EA or briefly A = Ar · EA.(1) Any constituent measure represents some direct Y or inverse 1/Y measure which can be both absolute and relative. In physics, the composite quantities A and EA are termed the ...
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