Kilo is a unit prefix in the metric system of measurement, denoting multiplication by one thousand (103). The International System of Units reserves the lowercase symbol k.

Kilo is derived from the Greek word χίλιοι (chilioi), meaning "thousand".

In 19th century English the prefix was sometimes spelled chilio, in line with a puristic opinion by Thomas Young. As an opponent of suggestions to introduce the metric system in Britain, he qualified the nomenclature adopted in France as barbarous.

Examples

By extension, currencies are sometimes also preceded by the prefix:

  • one kiloeuro (k€) is 1000 euros
  • one kilodollar (k$) is 1000 dollars

kilobyte

For multiples of the byte in some fields of computer science and information technology, another definition has been in common use, in which the kilobyte measures 1024 bytes (210 bytes), because 210 is approximately 103. The reason for this application is that digital hardware natively use base 2 exponentiation.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) comments on the confusion caused by these contrasting definitions: "Faced with this reality, the IEEE Standards Board decided that IEEE standards will use the conventional, internationally adopted, definitions of the SI prefixes." A new set of binary prefixes, based on powers of 2, was introduced by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), which defines 1024 bytes as one kibibyte (1 KiB).

Exponentiation

When units occur in exponentiation, such as in square and cubic forms, any multiplier prefix is part of the unit, and thus included in the exponentiation.

  • 1 km2 means one square kilometre or the area of a square that measures 1000 m on each side or 106 m2 (as opposed to 1000 square meters, which is the area of a square that measures 31.6 m on each side).
  • 1 km3 means one cubic kilometre or the volume of a cube that measures 1000 m on each side or 109 m3 (as opposed to 1000 cubic meters, which is the volume of a cube that measures 10 m on each side).

See also

  • milli (inverse of kilo, denoting a factor of 1/1000)
  • kibi (binary prefix, denoting a factor of 1024)
  • RKM code
SI prefixesvte
PrefixBase 10DecimalAdoption
NameSymbol
quettaQ103010000000000000000000000000000002022
ronnaR10271000000000000000000000000000
yottaY102410000000000000000000000001991
zettaZ10211000000000000000000000
exaE101810000000000000000001975
petaP10151000000000000000
teraT101210000000000001960
gigaG1091000000000
megaM10610000001873
kilok10310001795
hectoh102100
decada10110
1001
decid10−10.11795
centic10−20.01
millim10−30.001
microμ10−60.0000011873
nanon10−90.0000000011960
picop10−120.000000000001
femtof10−150.0000000000000011964
attoa10−180.000000000000000001
zeptoz10−210.0000000000000000000011991
yoctoy10−240.000000000000000000000001
rontor10−270.0000000000000000000000000012022
quectoq10−300.000000000000000000000000000001
Notes