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Tera-

Tera- (; symbol T) is a metric prefix denoting a factor of a short-scale trillion or long-scale billion (10<sup>12</sup> or ). It was adopted in the International System of Units (SI) in 1960. The prefix is derived from the Greek word (téras), meaning "".

Exponentiation

  • 1&nbsp;Tm<sup>2</sup> means one square terametre, or the size of a × square (10<sup>24</sup>&nbsp;m<sup>2</sup>), not square metres (10<sup>12</sup>&nbsp;m<sup>2</sup>).
  • 1 Tm<sup>3</sup> means one cubic terametre, or the size of a × × cube (10<sup>36</sup>&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>), not cubic metres (10<sup>12</sup>&nbsp;m<sup>3</sup>)

Computing

In computing, tera- may sometimes refer to 2<sup>40</sup> (1024<sup>4</sup> or ) instead of 10<sup>12</sup>, such as in data storage units like the terabyte (TB). The binary prefix tebi- (; symbol Ti) has been adopted by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) to signify 2<sup>40</sup> and avoid this ambiguity. JEDEC however still uses tera- for 2<sup>40</sup> in its memory standards.

Common usage

Computing

Electromagnetism

Energy and power

  • terajoule (TJ): used to express energy yields of large events, such as nuclear explosions or earthquakes.
  • terawatt (TW): used in measuring global electrical generation and consumption.
  • Worldwide installed solar capacity reached several terawatts in 2022.
  • Peak power of a 30-microsecond lightning strike.
  • terawatt-hour (TW⋅h or TWh): common unit for large-scale electrical energy production or consumption.

See also

References

External links