Quantities having dimension ,
dimensionless quantities, regularly occur in sciences, and are formally treated within the field of
dimensional analysis. In the 19th century, French mathematician
Joseph Fourier and Scottish physicist
James Clerk Maxwell led significant developments in the modern concepts of
dimension and
unit. Later work by British physicists
Osborne Reynolds and
Lord Rayleigh contributed to the understanding of dimensionless numbers in physics. Building on Rayleigh's method of dimensional analysis,
Edgar Buckingham proved the
theorem (independently of French mathematician
Joseph Bertrand's previous work) to formalize the nature of these quantities. Numerous dimensionless numbers, mostly ratios, were coined in the early 1900s, particularly in the areas of
fluid mechanics and
heat transfer. Measuring logarithm of ratios as
levels in the (derived) unit
decibel (dB) finds widespread use nowadays. There have been periodic proposals to "patch" the SI system to reduce confusion regarding physical dimensions. For example, a 2017
op-ed in
Nature argued for formalizing the
radian as a physical unit. The idea was rebutted on the grounds that such a change would raise inconsistencies for both established dimensionless groups, like the
Strouhal number, and for mathematically distinct entities that happen to have the same units, like
torque (a
vector product) versus energy (a
scalar product). In another instance in the early 2000s, the
International Committee for Weights and Measures discussed naming the unit of 1 as the "
uno", but the idea of just introducing a new SI name for 1 was dropped. == Buckingham theorem ==