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A [[Fonzie#References in popular culture|MegaFonzie]] is a fictional unit of measurement of an object's coolness invented by [[Hubert J. Farnsworth|Professor Farnsworth]] in the [[Futurama]] episode, [[Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV]]. A 'Fonzie' is about the amount of coolness inherent in the ''[[Happy Days]]'' character [[Fonzie]].<ref>http://www.thegameslave.com/Misc/Science/TreatiseonUnitsofMeasure.htm</ref>
A [[Fonzie#References in popular culture|MegaFonzie]] is a fictional unit of measurement of an object's coolness invented by [[Hubert J. Farnsworth|Professor Farnsworth]] in the [[Futurama]] episode, [[Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV]]. A 'Fonzie' is about the amount of coolness inherent in the ''[[Happy Days]]'' character [[Fonzie]].<ref>http://www.thegameslave.com/Misc/Science/TreatiseonUnitsofMeasure.htm</ref>


===Duration: Stobart===
===Duration===
====TweenTurd====
A fictitious unit of time equivalent to 7 minutes and 6 seconds (7.1 minutes), measured as the average time interval between the [[defication]]s(turds) of a [[Maroon Bellied Parakeet]] named Ralph while he was perched on the shoulder of his owner's [[Banana Republic]] T-shirt. A Mega-TweenTurd, equivalent to 71 million minutes(or approx. 19.3 years) is also sometimes used, as in "If I continue working as a federal employee, I will be eligable for retirement in a Mega-TweenTurd".

====Stobart====
Based on the name of a UK haulage company the [[Eddie Stobart Ltd.| Stobart]] is the interval that one driver of one [[articulated lorry]] can go between [[bacon sandwich| bacon sandwiches]] and [[builders tea| cups of stewed, over-sweet, tea]]. Depending on congestion the Stobart is either a unit of time or distance. {{Fact|date=April 2008}}
Based on the name of a UK haulage company the [[Eddie Stobart Ltd.| Stobart]] is the interval that one driver of one [[articulated lorry]] can go between [[bacon sandwich| bacon sandwiches]] and [[builders tea| cups of stewed, over-sweet, tea]]. Depending on congestion the Stobart is either a unit of time or distance. {{Fact|date=April 2008}}



===Magical energy: Thaum===
===Magical energy: Thaum===

Revision as of 21:32, 15 May 2010

This is a sub-article to List of unusual units of measurement

Many comedians and humour writers have made use of, or invented, units of measurement intended primarily for their humour value. This is a list of such units invented by sources that are notable for reasons other than having made the unit itself, and of units that are widely known in the anglophone world for their humour value.

Conventional

These units may or may not have precise objectively measurable values, but all of them measure quantities that have been defined within the S.I. system of units.

Systems

Great Underground Empire (Zork)

In the Zork series of games, the Great Underground Empire had its own system of measures, the most frequently referenced of which was the bloit. Defined as the distance the king's favorite pet could run in one hour (spoofing a popular legend about the history of the foot), the length of the bloit varied dramatically, but the one canonical conversion to real-world units puts it at approximately two-thirds of a mile. Liquid volume was measured in gloops, and temperature in degrees Q (57°Q is said to be the freezing point of water). [1]

Potrzebie

In issue 33, Mad published a partial table of the "Potrzebie System of Weights and Measures", developed by 19-year-old Donald E. Knuth, later a famed computer scientist. According to Knuth, the basis of this new revolutionary system is the potrzebie, which equals the thickness of Mad issue 26, or 2.263348517438173216473 mm.[2]

Volume was measured in ngogn (equal to 1000 cubic potrzebies), mass in blintz (equal to the mass of 1 ngogn of halva, which is "a form of pie [with] a specific gravity of 3.1416 and a specific heat of .31416"), and time in seven named units (decimal powers of the average earth rotation, equal to 1 "clarke"). The system also features such units as whatmeworry, cowznofski, vreeble, hoo and hah.

According to the "Date" system in Knuth's article, which substitutes a 10-clarke "mingo" for a month and a 100-clarke "cowznofski," for a year, the date of October 29, 2007, is rendered as "To 1, 190 C. M." (for Cowznofsko Madi, or "in the Cowznofski of our MAD". The dates are calculated from October 1, 1952, the date MAD was first published. Dates before this point are referred to (perhaps tongue-in-cheek) as "B.M." ("Before MAD.") The ten "Mingoes" are: Tales (Tal.) Calculated (Cal.) To (To) Drive (Dri.) You (You) Humor (Hum.) In (In) A (A) Jugular (Jug.) Vein (Vei.)

Length

Beard-second

The beard-second is a unit of length inspired by the light-year, but used for extremely short distances such as those in nuclear physics. The beard-second is defined as the length an average beard grows in one second. Kemp Bennet Kolb defines the distance as exactly 100 Ångströms,[3] while Nordling and Österman's Physics Handbook has it half the size at 5 nanometers.[4] Google Calculator supports the beard-second for unit conversions using the latter conversion factor.[5]

Smoot

The smoot is a unit of length, defined as the height of Oliver R. Smoot — who, fittingly, was later the president of the ISO. The unit is used to measure the length of the Harvard Bridge. Canonically, and originally, in 1958 when Smoot was a Lambda Chi Alpha pledge at MIT (class of 1962), the bridge was measured to be 364.4 smoots, plus or minus one ear, using Mr. Smoot himself as a ruler. At the time, Smoot was 5 feet, 7 inches, or 170 cm, tall.[6] Google Earth and Google Calculator includes the smoot as a unit of measurement.

Sheppey

A measure of distance equal to about 78 of a mile (1.4 km), defined as the closest distance at which sheep remain picturesque. The Sheppey is the creation of Douglas Adams and John Lloyd, included in The Meaning of Liff, their dictionary of putative meanings for words that are actually just place names. [7] It is named after the Isle of Sheppey in the UK.

Area

Barn, shed, outhouse

A barn is a serious unit of area used by nuclear physicists to quantify the scattering cross-section of very small particles, such as atomic nuclei.[8] It is one of the very few units which are accepted to be used with SI units, and one of the most recent units to have been established (cf. the knot and the bar, other non-SI units acceptable in limited circumstances).[9] One barn is equal to 1.0×10−28 m2. The name derives from the folk expression "Couldn't hit the broad side of a barn", used by particle accelerator physicists to refer to the difficulty of achieving a collision between particles. The outhouse (1.0×10−6 barns) and shed (1.0×10−24 barns) are derived by analogy.

Spatial volume

Barn-megaparsec

This unit is similar in concept to the attoparsec, combining very large and small scales. A barn (b) is a unit of cross-sectional area used in nuclear physics, equal to 10-28 m2, named after the proverbial "broad side of a barn". When multiplied by the megaparsec (Mpc) - a very large unit of length used for measuring the distances between galaxies - the result is a human-scaled unit of volume approximately equal to 23 of a teaspoon (about 3 ml).

Bottlesworth

This unit is approximately equal to a standard bottle of Champagne (0.75 litres), and is designed to allow the use of wine in scientific experiments in the science comedy Look Around You.

Power

Donkeypower

This facetious engineering unit is defined as 250 watts—about a third of a horsepower.[10]

Information flow

Dirac

Physicist Paul Dirac was known among his colleagues for his precise yet taciturn nature. His colleagues in Cambridge jokingly defined a unit of a dirac which was one word per hour[11].

Non-conventional

These units describe dimensions which are not and can not be covered by the S.I system of units.

Earthquake intensity

Tom Weller suggests the humorous Rictus scale (a takeoff of the conventional Richter scale) for earthquake intensity.[12]

S.No Magnitude Observed Effects
1 0-3 Small articles in local papers
2 3-5 Lead story on local news; mentioned on network news
3 5-6.5 Lead story on network news; wire-service photos appear in newspapers nationally; governor visits scene
4 6.5-7.5 Network correspondents sent to scene; president visits area; commemorative T-shirts appear
5 7.5 up Covers of weekly news magazines; network specials; "instant books" appear

Sound intensity: Phone

The unit of perceived loudness, phon, is sometimes also called phone. This has led to puns such as One megaphone equals 1012 microphones. While the phon is a real unit, this intentional misspelling, phone, exists solely for the humour value.

Beauty: Helen

Helen of Troy (from the Iliad) is widely known as "the face that launched a thousand ships". Thus, 1 millihelen is the amount of beauty needed to launch a single ship.

According to The Rebel Angels, a novel by Robertson Davies, this system was invented by Cambridge mathematician W.A.H. Rushton. However, the term was possibly first suggested by Isaac Asimov.[13] The obvious reference is Marlowe's line from the play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships...?" [14] The word Helen is also used in the book Pretties, the second book in the series Uglies by Scott Westerfeld. In that book, the characters joke about how pretty something looks in Helens and megaHelens.

The Catalogue of Ships from Book II of The Iliad, which describes in detail the commanders who came to fight for Helen and the ships they brought with them, details a total of 1,186 ships which came to fight the Trojan War. As such, Helen herself has a beauty rating of 1.186 Helens, capable of launching more than one thousand ships.

Negative values have also been observed—these, of course, are measured by the number of ships sunk or the number of clocks stopped. An alternative interpretation of 1 negative Helen is the amount of negative beauty (i.e. ugliness) that can launch one thousand ships the other way.

David Goines has written a humorous article[15] describing various Helen-units. It has a chart with the fire-lighting and ship-launching capability for different powers of "Helens". For example, a picohelen (ph) (10−12 helens) indicates the amount of beauty that can "Barbecue a couple of Steaks & Toss an Inner Tube Into the Pool".

Thomas Fink, in The Man's Book[16] defines beauty both in terms of ships launched, and also in terms of the number of women that one woman will, on average, be more beautiful than. One Helen (H) is the quantity of beauty to be more beautiful than 50 million women, the number of women estimated to have been alive in the 12th century BC. Ten Helena (Ha) is the beauty sufficient for one oarsmen (of which 50 are on a ship) to risk his life, or be the most beautiful of a thousand women. Beauty is logarithmic on a base of 2. For beauty to increase by 1 Ha, a woman must be the most beautiful of twice as many women. One Helen is 25.6 Ha. The most beautiful woman who ever lived would score 34.2 Ha, and 1.34 H, the pick of a dozen women would be 3.6 Ha, and 0.14 H.

Bogosity: Lenat

The unit of bogosity, derived from the fictional field of Quantum Bogodynamics. The Lenat is seldom used, as it is understood that it is too large for normal conversation. Its most common form is the microlenat.[17]

Coolness: MegaFonzie

A MegaFonzie is a fictional unit of measurement of an object's coolness invented by Professor Farnsworth in the Futurama episode, Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV. A 'Fonzie' is about the amount of coolness inherent in the Happy Days character Fonzie.[18]

Duration

TweenTurd

A fictitious unit of time equivalent to 7 minutes and 6 seconds (7.1 minutes), measured as the average time interval between the defications(turds) of a Maroon Bellied Parakeet named Ralph while he was perched on the shoulder of his owner's Banana Republic T-shirt. A Mega-TweenTurd, equivalent to 71 million minutes(or approx. 19.3 years) is also sometimes used, as in "If I continue working as a federal employee, I will be eligable for retirement in a Mega-TweenTurd".

Stobart

Based on the name of a UK haulage company the Stobart is the interval that one driver of one articulated lorry can go between bacon sandwiches and cups of stewed, over-sweet, tea. Depending on congestion the Stobart is either a unit of time or distance. [citation needed]


Magical energy: Thaum

The Thaum is a measuring unit used in the Terry Pratchett series of Discworld novels to quantify magic. It equals the amount of mystical energy required to conjure up one small white pigeon, or three normal-sized billiard balls. It can, of course, be measured with a thaumometer, and regular SI-modifiers apply (e.g. millithaum, kilothaum). [19]

A thaumometer looks like a black cube with a dial on one side. A standard one is good for up to a million thaums - if there is more magic than that around, measuring it should not be your primary concern.

It is not to be confused with the magical particle "thaum" from the same series of novels.

Pleasure: Hedon

Philosophers talking about Jeremy Bentham's Utilitarianism sometimes use the conceptual unit of the Hedon to describe the amount of pleasure, equivalent to the amount of pleasure a person receives from gaining one util of utility. [20]

Fame: Warhol

This is a unit of fame or hype, derived from Andy Warhol's dictum "everyone will be world-famous for fifteen minutes" — it represents, naturally, fifteen minutes of fame. Some multiples are:

  • 1 kilowarhol — famous for 15,000 minutes, or 10.42 days. A sort of metric "nine day wonder".
  • 1 megawarhol — famous for 15 million minutes, or 28.5 years.

First used by Cullen Murphy in 1997.[21]

Also used simply as meaning 15 minutes; as the Warhol worm, that could infect all vulnerable machines on the entire Internet in 15 minutes or less.

Quackery: Canard

The canard is a unit of quackery created by Andy Lewis in the need for a fractional fruitloopery index[22]. It is proposed as an SI Unit to replace the old Crackpot Index that was presented in 1998.

"Quack words include 'energy', 'holistic', 'vibrations', 'magnetic healing', 'quantum'. These words are usually borrowed from physics and used to promote dubious health claims."

It scores on a scale from 0 to 10 the quantity of quackery used. Examples are:

Interestingly, the Wikipedia article on homoeopathy scores a 0 as sceptical language is used in conjunction with quackery.

A Quackometer (measurer of fruitloopery) can be found at http://www.quackometer.net/?page=quackometer. This website measures webpages and also association of names with quackery.

See also

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia Frobozzica, Infocom, 1993.
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Kemp Bennet Kolb (2008). "The beard-second, a new unit of length". This Book Warps Space and Time. p. 13. ISBN 9780740777134.
  4. ^ C Nordling & J. Österman. Physics Handbook for Science and Engineering. Studentlitteratur.
  5. ^ http://www.google.com/search?q=6+meters+in+beard-seconds
  6. ^ "smoot". The Jargon File (version 4.4.7). Retrieved 2006-06-27.
  7. ^ The Meaning of Liff, Douglas Adams and John Lloyd , 1984. IBSN 0-51755-347-3
  8. ^ "Chapter 4.1: Non-SI units accepted for use with the SI, and units based on fundamental constants". SI brochure (8th edition). International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). May 2006. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
  9. ^ "Table 8. Other non-SI units". SI brochure (8th edition). BIPM. May 2006. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
  10. ^ "Rowlett's Dictionary of Units". Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  11. ^ Graham Farmelo. The Strangest Man: The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Quantum Genius. p. 89. ISBN 0571222862.
  12. ^ Weller, Tom (1985). Science Made Stupid. Houghton Mifflin. p. 76. ISBN 0395366461. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  13. ^ Isaac Asimov
  14. ^ The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe - Project Gutenberg
  15. ^ On the Inefficiency of Beauty Contests and a Suggestion for Their Modernization
  16. ^ Fink, The Man's Book (London, 2006), pp. 44-45; [2]
  17. ^ "The Original Hacker's Dictionary". Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  18. ^ http://www.thegameslave.com/Misc/Science/TreatiseonUnitsofMeasure.htm
  19. ^ Prachett, Terry (1998). The Last Continent. Doubleday London. ISBN 0-385-40989-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  20. ^ EG, "Utilitarianism and the Wrongness of Killing", Richard G. Henson, The Philosophical Review Vol. 80, No. 3 (Jul., 1971), pp. 320-337.
  21. ^ Murphy, Cullen (1997). "Too Much of a Good Thing — How much hype is overhype?". Slate.com. Retrieved 2006-03-10. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  22. ^ http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20627582.100-towards-a-universal-crackpot-standard.html