Specifies which prefix unit is used.
QUDT Units of Measure for All Units Release 2.1.12
The \(\textit{ampere}\), often shortened to \(\textit{amp}\), is the SI unit of electric current and is one of the seven SI base units.
\(\text{A}\ \equiv\ \text{amp (or ampere)}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{C}}{\text{s}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{coulomb}}{\text{second}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{J}}{\text{Wb}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{joule}}{\text{weber}}\)
Note that SI supports only the use of symbols and deprecates the use of any abbreviations for units.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ampere
0112/2///62720#UAA101
0112/2///62720#UAD717
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampere?oldid=494026699
A
A
AMP
Ampere
amp
\(\textbf{Ampere hour}\) is a practical unit of electric charge equal to the charge flowing in one hour through a conductor passing one ampere. An ampere-hour or amp-hour (symbol \(Ah,\,AHr,\, A \cdot h, A h\)) is a unit of electric charge, with sub-units milliampere-hour (\(mAh\)) and milliampere second (\(mAs\)). One ampere-hour is equal to 3600 coulombs (ampere-seconds), the electric charge transferred by a steady current of one ampere for one hour. The ampere-hour is frequently used in measurements of electrochemical systems such as electroplating and electrical batteries. The commonly seen milliampere-hour (\(mAh\) or \(mA \cdot h\)) is one-thousandth of an ampere-hour (\(3.6 \,coulombs\)).
3600.0
0112/2///62720#UAA102
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampere-hour
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199233991.001.0001/acref-9780199233991-e-86
A h
A.h
AMH
Ampere Hour
The SI unit of electromagnetic moment.
\(A-M^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA106
http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/ampere+meter+squared
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
A.m2
A5
Ampere Square Meter
Ampere Square Metre
The SI unit of gyromagnetic ratio.
\(A-m^2/J-s\)
http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/ampere+square+meter+per+joule+second
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
A.m2.J-1.s-1
A.m2/(J.s)
Ampere Square Meter Per Joule Second
Ampere Square Metre Per Joule Second
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAB073
SI base unit ampere divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
A.cm-1
A2
Ampere Per Centimeter
Ampere Per Centimetre
10000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB052
SI base unit ampere divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
A.cm-2
A/cm2
A4
Ampere Per Square Centimeter
Ampere Per Square Centimetre
A measure used to express how a current is subject to temperature. Originally used in Wien's Law to describe phenomena related to filaments. One use today is to express how a current generator derates with temperature.
57.2957795
\(A/degC\)
http://books.google.com/books?id=zkErAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA60&lpg=PA60&dq=ampere+per+degree
http://web.mit.edu/course/21/21.guide/use-tab.htm
A.Cel-1
A/Cel
Ampere per Degree Celsius
The inverse measure of \(joule-per-ampere\) or \(weber\). The measure for the reciprical of magnetic flux.
1.0
\(A/J\)
A.J-1
A/J
Ampere per Joule
is the SI unit of magnetic field strength. One ampere per meter is equal to \(\pi/250\) oersteds (\(12.566\, 371\,millioersteds\)) in CGS units. The ampere per meter is also the SI unit of "magnetization" in the sense of magnetic dipole moment per unit volume; in this context \(1 A/m = 0.001\,emu\,per\,cubic\,centimeter\).
1.0
\(A/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA104
A.m-1
A/m
AE
Ampere per Meter
Ampere per Metre
\(\textbf{Ampere Per Square Meter}\) is a unit in the category of electric current density. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system.
1.0
\(A/m^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA105
https://cdd.iec.ch/cdd/iec61360/iec61360.nsf/Units/0112-2---62720%23UAA105
A.m-2
A/m2
A41
Ampere per Square Meter
Ampere per Square Metre
\(a/m^2-k^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB353
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
A.m-2.K-1
A/(m2.K)
A6
Ampere per Square Meter Square Kelvin
Ampere per Square Metre Square Kelvin
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB072
SI base unit ampere divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
A.mm-1
A/mm
A3
Ampere Per Millimeter
Ampere Per Millimetre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB051
SI base unit ampere divided by the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
A.mm-2
A/mm2
A7
Ampere Per Square Millimeter
Ampere Per Square Millimetre
\(\textit{Ampere per Radian}\) is a derived unit for measuring the amount of current per unit measure of angle, expressed in ampere per radian.
1.0
\(a-per-rad\)
A.rad-1
A/rad
Ampere per Radian
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA107
product out of the SI base unit ampere and the SI base unit second
A.s
A8
Ampere Second
The acre is a unit of area in a number of different systems, including the imperial and U.S. customary systems. Its international symbol is ac. The most commonly used acres today are the international acre and, in the United States, the survey acre. The most common use of the acre is to measure tracts of land. One international acre is equal to 4046.8564224 square metres.
4046.8564224
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Acre
0112/2///62720#UAA320
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acre?oldid=495387342
acre
[acr_br]
ACR
Acre
acre
An acre-foot is a unit of volume commonly used in the United States in reference to large-scale water resources, such as reservoirs, aqueducts, canals, sewer flow capacity, and river flows. It is defined by the volume of one acre of surface area to a depth of one foot. Since the acre is defined as a chain by a furlong (\(66 ft \times 660 ft\)) the acre-foot is exactly \(43,560 cubic feet\). For irrigation water, the volume of \(1 ft \times 1 \; ac = 43,560 \; ft^{3} (1,233.482 \; m^{3}, 325,851 \; US gal)\).
1233.4818375475202
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acre-foot
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-35
ac-ft
[acr_br].[ft_i]
Acre Foot
Afghanistan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Afghani
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afghani?oldid=485904590
Afghani
Armenia
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Armenian_dram
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian_dram?oldid=492709723
Armenian Dram
The \(\textit{Unified Atomic Mass Unit}\) (symbol: \(\mu\)) or \(\textit{dalton}\) (symbol: Da) is a unit that is used for indicating mass on an atomic or molecular scale. It is defined as one twelfth of the rest mass of an unbound atom of carbon-12 in its nuclear and electronic ground state, and has a value of \(1.660538782(83) \times 10^{-27} kg\). One \(Da\) is approximately equal to the mass of one proton or one neutron. The CIPM have categorised it as a \(\textit{"non-SI unit whose values in SI units must be obtained experimentally"}\).
0.00000000000000000000000000166053878283
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_mass_unit
μ
u
Atomic mass unit
The \(Angstr\ddot{o}m\) is an internationally recognized unit of length equal to \(0.1 \,nanometre\) or \(1 \times 10^{-10}\,metres\). Although accepted for use, it is not formally defined within the International System of Units(SI). The angstrom is often used in the natural sciences to express the sizes of atoms, lengths of chemical bonds and the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, and in technology for the dimensions of parts of integrated circuits. It is also commonly used in structural biology.
0.0000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/%C3%85ngstr%C3%B6m
0112/2///62720#UAA023
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ångström?oldid=436192495
\(\AA\)
Å
Ao
A11
Angstrom
A minute of arc, arcminute, or minute arc (MOA), is a unit of angular measurement equal to one sixtieth (1/60) of one degree (circle/21,600), or \(\pi /10,800 radians\). In turn, a second of arc or arcsecond is one sixtieth (1/60) of one minute of arc. Since one degree is defined as one three hundred and sixtieth (1/360) of a rotation, one minute of arc is 1/21,600 of a rotation.
0.000290888209
0112/2///62720#UAA097
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minute_of_arc
1
'
'
D61
ArcMinute
"Arc Second" is a unit of angular measure, also called the \(\textit{second of arc}\), equal to \(1/60 \; arcminute\). One arcsecond is a very small angle: there are 1,296,000 in a circle. The SI recommends \(\textit{double prime}\) (\(''\)) as the symbol for the arcsecond. The symbol has become common in astronomy, where very small angles are stated in milliarcseconds (\(mas\)).
0.00000484813681
0112/2///62720#UAA096
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minute_of_arc#Symbols.2C_abbreviations_and_subdivisions
"
''
D62
ArcSecond
An 'are' is a unit of area equal to 0.02471 acre and 100 centare.
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAB048
http://www.anidatech.com/units.html
a
ar
ARE
are
Argentina
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Argentine_peso
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argentine_peso?oldid=491431588
Argentine Peso
The \(\textit{ampere-turn}\) was the MKS unit of magnetomotive force (MMF), represented by a direct current of one ampere flowing in a single-turn loop in a vacuum. "Turns" refers to the winding number of an electrical conductor comprising an inductor. The ampere-turn was replaced by the SI unit, \(ampere\).
1.0
At
Ampere Turn
The \(\textit{Ampere Turn per Inch}\) is a measure of magnetic field intensity and is eual to 12.5664 Oersted.
39.3700787
\(At/in\)
Ampere Turn per Inch
The \(\textit{Ampere Turn per Metre}\) is the SI unit of magnetic field strength. One ampere per meter is equal to \(\pi/250\) oersteds (12.566 371 millioersteds) in CGS units. The ampere per meter is also the SI unit of "magnetization" in the sense of magnetic dipole moment per unit volume; in this context \(1 A/m = 0.001 emu per cubic centimeter\).
1.0
\(At/m\)
Ampere Turn per Meter
Ampere Turn per Metre
The standard atmosphere (symbol: atm) is an international reference pressure defined as \(101.325 \,kPa\) and formerly used as unit of pressure. For practical purposes it has been replaced by the bar which is \(100 kPa\). The difference of about 1% is not significant for many applications, and is within the error range of common pressure gauges.
101325.0
0112/2///62720#UAA322
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_(unit)
atm
atm
ATM
Standard Atmosphere
A technical atmosphere (symbol: at) is a non-SI unit of pressure equal to one kilogram-force per square centimeter. The symbol 'at' clashes with that of the katal (symbol: 'kat'), the SI unit of catalytic activity; a kilotechnical atmosphere would have the symbol 'kat', indistinguishable from the symbol for the katal. It also clashes with that of the non-SI unit, the attotonne, but that unit would be more likely be rendered as the equivalent SI unit. Assay ton (abbreviation 'AT') is not a unit of measurement, but a standard quantity used in assaying ores of precious metals; it is \(29 1D6 \,grams\) (short assay ton) or \(32 2D3 \,grams\) (long assay ton), the amount which bears the same ratio to a milligram as a short or long ton bears to a troy ounce. In other words, the number of milligrams of a particular metal found in a sample of this size gives the number of troy ounces contained in a short or long ton of ore.
98066.5
0112/2///62720#UAA321
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_atmosphere
\(1 at = 98.0665 kPa \approx 0.96784 standard atmospheres\)
at
att
ATT
Technical Atmosphere
An astronomical unit (abbreviated as AU, au, a.u., or ua) is a unit of length equal to \(149,597,870,700 metres\) (\(92,955,807.273 mi\)) or approximately the mean Earth Sun distance.
149597870691.6
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Astronomical_unit
0112/2///62720#UAB066
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_unit
An astronomical unit (abbreviated as AU, au, a.u., or ua) is a unit of length equal to 149,597,870,700 metres (92,955,807.273 mi) or approximately the mean Earth Sun distance. The symbol ua is recommended by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, and the international standard ISO 80000, while au is recommended by the International Astronomical Union, and is more common in Anglosphere countries. In general, the International System of Units only uses capital letters for the symbols of units which are named after individual scientists, while au or a.u. can also mean atomic unit or even arbitrary unit. However, the use of AU to refer to the astronomical unit is widespread. The astronomical constant whose value is one astronomical unit is referred to as unit distance and is given the symbol A. [Wikipedia]
AU
au
AU
A12
astronomical-unit
Australia, Australian Antarctic Territory, Christmas Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Heard and McDonald Islands, Kiribati, Nauru, Norfolk Island, Tuvalu
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Australian_dollar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_dollar?oldid=495046408
Australian Dollar
Aruba
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Aruban_florin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aruban_florin?oldid=492925638
Aruban Guilder
Azerbaijan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Azerbaijani_manat
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azerbaijani_manat?oldid=495479090
Azerbaijanian Manat
10.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abampere
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abampere?oldid=489318583
http://wordinfo.info/results/abampere
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-13?rskey=i2kRRz
\(1\,abA = 10\,A\)
The Abampere (aA), also called the biot after Jean-Baptiste Biot, is the basic electromagnetic unit of electric current in the emu-cgs system of units (electromagnetic cgs). One abampere is equal to ten amperes in the SI system of units. An abampere is the constant current that produces, when maintained in two parallel conductors of negligible circular section and of infinite length placed 1 centimetre apart, a force of 2 dynes per centimetre between the two conductors.
abA
Bi
Abampere
biot
"Abampere Square centimeter" is the unit of magnetic moment in the electromagnetic centimeter-gram-second system.
1000000000.0
\(aAcm2\)
http://wordinfo.info/unit/4266
Bi.cm2
Determine type for magnetic moment
Abampere Square centimeter
Abampere Square centimetre
Abampere Per Square Centimeter (aA/cm2) is a unit in the category of Electric current density. It is also known as abamperes per square centimeter, abampere/square centimeter, abampere/square centimetre, abamperes per square centimetre, abampere per square centimetre. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system. Abampere Per Square Centimeter (\(aA/cm^2\)) has a dimension of \(L^{-2}I\) where L is length, and I is electric current. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(A/m^{2}\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 100000.
100000.0
\(aba-per-cm2\)
http://wordinfo.info/results/abampere
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_current_density--abampere_per_square_centimeter.cfm
Bi.cm-2
Bi/cm2
Abampere per Square Centimeter
Abampere per Square Centimetre
"Statampere" (statA) is a unit in the category of Electric current. It is also known as statamperes. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system. Statampere (statA) has a dimension of I where I is electric current. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit A by multiplying its value by a factor of 3.355641E-010.
0.0000000003335641
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_current--statampere.cfm
statA
Statampere
The Statampere per Square Centimeter is a unit of electric current density in the c.g.s. system of units.
0.000003335641
\(statA / cm^{2}\)
Statampere per Square Centimeter
Statampere per Square Centimetre
An AttoColomb is \(10^{-18} C\).
0.000000000000000001
aC
aC
AttoCoulomb
0.000000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA319
0,000 000 000 000 000 001-fold of the SI derived unit farad
aF
H48
Attofarad
0.000000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAB125
0,000 000 000 000 000 001-fold of the derived SI unit joule
aJ
A13
Attojoule
0.000000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAB151
unit of the Planck's constant as product of the SI derived unit joule and the SI base unit second
aJ.s
B18
Attojoule Second
A logarithmic unit of sound pressure equal to 10 decibels (dB), It is defined as: \(1 B = (1/2) \log_{10}(Np)\)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bel
0112/2///62720#UAB351
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_unit
B
B
Bel
A ban is a logarithmic unit which measures information or entropy, based on base 10 logarithms and powers of 10, rather than the powers of 2 and base 2 logarithms which define the bit. One ban is approximately \(3.32 (log_2 10) bits\).
2.30258509
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ban
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban?oldid=472969907
ban
Ban
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to \(100,000\,Pa\). It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000\,Pa = 1 \,bar \approx 750.0616827\, Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
100000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bar
0112/2///62720#UAA323
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar?oldid=493875987
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
bar
bar
BAR
Bar
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA326
product of the unit bar and the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
bar.L.s-1
bar.L/s
F91
Bar Liter Per Second
Bar Litre Per Second
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA814
product out of the 0.001-fold of the unit bar and the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
bar.m3.s-1
bar.m3/s
F96
Bar Cubic Meter Per Second
Bar Cubic Metre Per Second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA325
pressure relation consisting of the unit bar divided by the unit bar
bar.bar-1
bar/bar
J56
Bar Per Bar
100000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA324
unit with the name bar divided by the SI base unit kelvin
bar.K-1
bar/K
F81
Bar Per Kelvin
A barad is a dyne per square centimetre (\(dyn \cdot cm^{-2}\)), and is equal to \(0.1 Pa \) (\(1 \, micro \, bar\), \(0.000014504 \, p.s.i.\)). Note that this is precisely the microbar, the confusable bar being related in size to the normal atmospheric pressure, at \(100\,dyn \cdot cm^{-2}\). Accordingly barad was not abbreviated, so occurs prefixed as in \(cbarad = centibarad\). Despite being the coherent unit for pressure in c.g.s., barad was probably much less common than the non-coherent bar. Barad is sometimes called \(barye\), a name also used for \(bar\).
Barad
A barn (symbol b) is a unit of area. Originally used in nuclear physics for expressing the cross sectional area of nuclei and nuclear reactions, today it is used in all fields of high energy physics to express the cross sections of any scattering process, and is best understood as a measure of the probability of interaction between small particles. A barn is defined as \(10^{28} m^2 (100 fm^2)\) and is approximately the cross sectional area of a uranium nucleus. The barn is also the unit of area used in nuclear quadrupole resonance and nuclear magnetic resonance to quantify the interaction of a nucleus with an electric field gradient. While the barn is not an SI unit, it is accepted for use with the SI due to its continued use in particle physics.
0.018
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Barn
0112/2///62720#UAB297
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn?oldid=492907677
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn_(unit)
b
b
A14
Barn
<p>The barye, or sometimes barad, barrie, bary, baryd, baryed, or barie, is the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) unit of pressure. It is equal to 1 dyne per square centimetre.</p>
0.1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Barye
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barye?oldid=478631158
\(g/(cm\cdot s{2}\)
ρ
Barye
barad
barie
bary
baryd
baryed
Barbados
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Barbadian_dollar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbadian_dollar?oldid=494388633
Barbados Dollar
A barrel is one of several units of volume, with dry barrels, fluid barrels (UK beer barrel, U.S. beer barrel), oil barrel, etc. The volume of some barrel units is double others, with various volumes in the range of about 100-200 litres (22-44 imp gal; 26-53 US gal).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Barrel
0112/2///62720#UAA334
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrel?oldid=494614619
bbl
[bbl_us]
BLL
Barrel
0.1591132
0112/2///62720#UAA329
unit of the volume for crude oil according to the Imperial system of units
J57
Barrel (UK Petroleum)
0.000001841587
0112/2///62720#UAA331
unit of the volume barrel (UK petroleum) for crude oil according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit day
J59
Barrel (UK Petroleum) Per Day
0.0000441981
0112/2///62720#UAA332
unit of the volume barrel (UK petroleum) for crude oil according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit hour
J60
Barrel (UK Petroleum) Per Hour
0.002651886
0112/2///62720#UAA330
unit of the volume barrel (UK petroleum) for crude oil according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit minute
J58
Barrel (UK Petroleum) Per Minute
0.1591132
0112/2///62720#UAA333
unit of the volume barrel (UK petroleum) for crude oil according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
J61
Barrel (UK Petroleum) Per Second
0.1589873
0112/2///62720#UAA334
unit of the volume for crude oil according to the Anglo-American system of units
[bbl_us]
BLL
Barrel (US)
0.00000184
0112/2///62720#UAA335
unit of the volume barrel (US petroleum) for crude oil according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit day
[bbl_us].d-1
[bbl_us]/d
B1
Barrel (US) Per Day
0.0026498
0112/2///62720#UAA337
unit of the volume barrel (US petroleum) for crude oil according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit minute
[bbl_us].min-1
[bbl_us]/min
J63
Barrel (US) Per Minute
0.1156281989625
0112/2///62720#UAB117
non SI-conform unit of the volume in the USA which applies to a resolution from 1912: 1 dry barrel (US) equals approximately to 115,63 litre
BLD
Dry Barrel (US)
0.000044163
0112/2///62720#UAA336
unit of the volume barrel (US petroleum) for crude oil according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit hour
[bbl_us].h-1
[bbl_us]/h
J62
Barrel (US Petroleum) Per Hour
0.1589873
0112/2///62720#UAA338
unit of the volume barrel (US petroleum) for crude oil according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[bbl_us].s-1
[bbl_us]/s
J62
Barrel (US Petroleum) Per Second
Bangladesh
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bangladeshi_taka
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangladeshi_taka?oldid=492673895
Bangladeshi Taka
"Heart Beat per Minute" is a unit for 'Heart Rate' expressed as \(BPM\).
beats-per-min
/min{H.B.}
min-1{H.B.}
Heart Beats per Minute
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA110
unit for classification of winds according to their speed, developed by Sir Francis Beaufort as measure for the over-all behaviour of a ship's sail at different wind speeds
M19
Beaufort
Bahrain
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bahraini_dinar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahraini_dinar?oldid=493086643
Bahraini Dinar
"Biot" is another name for the abampere (aA), which is the basic electromagnetic unit of electric current in the emu-cgs (centimeter-gram-second) system of units. It is called after a French physicist, astronomer, and mathematician Jean-Baptiste Biot. One abampere is equal to ten amperes in the SI system of units. One abampere is the current, which produces a force of 2 dyne/cm between two infinitively long parallel wires that are 1 cm apart.
10.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Biot
0112/2///62720#UAB210
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biot?oldid=443318821
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/current/10-4/
Bi
Bi
Biot
In information theory, a bit is the amount of information that, on average, can be stored in a discrete bit. It is thus the amount of information carried by a choice between two equally likely outcomes. One bit corresponds to about 0.693 nats (ln(2)), or 0.301 hartleys (log10(2)).
0.69314718055994530941723212145818
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bit
0112/2///62720#UAA339
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit?oldid=495288173
bit
bit
J63
Bit
A bit per second (B/s) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1 bits per second.
0.69314718055994530941723212145818
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_rate_units#Kilobyte_per_second
bit/s
Bd
bit.s-1
bit/s
Bit per Second
The SI derived unit of activity, usually meaning radioactivity. "Radioactivity" is caused when atoms disintegrate, ejecting energetic particles. One becquerel is the radiation caused by one disintegration per second; this is equivalent to about 27.0270 picocuries (pCi). The unit is named for a French physicist, Antoine-Henri Becquerel (1852-1908), the discoverer of radioactivity. Note: both the becquerel and the hertz are basically defined as one event per second, yet they measure different things. The hertz is used to measure the rates of events that happen periodically in a fixed and definite cycle. The becquerel is used to measure the rates of events that happen sporadically and unpredictably, not in a definite cycle.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Becquerel
0112/2///62720#UAA111
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Becquerel?oldid=493710036
Bq
Bq
BQL
Becquerel
The only unit in the category of Specific radioactivity. It is also known as becquerels per kilogram, becquerel/kilogram. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Becquerel Per Kilogram (Bq/kg) has a dimension of \(M{-1}T{-1}\) where \(M\) is mass, and \(T\) is time. It essentially the same as the corresponding standard SI unit \(/kg/s\).
1.0
\(Bq/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAA112
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--specific_radioactivity--becquerel_per_kilogram.cfm
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
"Bequerel per Kilogram" is used to describe radioactivity, which is often expressed in becquerels per unit of volume or weight, to express how much radioactive material is contained in a sample.
Bq.kg-1
Bq/kg
A18
Becquerel per Kilogram
One radioactive disintegration per second from a one part in 10**3 of the SI unit of volume (cubic metre).
1000.0
Bq.L-1
Becquerels per litre
1.0
\(Bq/m^2\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
Bq.m-2
Bq/m2
Becquerel per Square Meter
Becquerel per Square Metre
Becquerel Per Cubic Meter (\(Bq/m3\)) is a unit in the category of Radioactivity concentration. It is also known as becquerels per cubic meter, becquerel per cubic metre, becquerels per cubic metre, becquerel/cubic inch. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Becquerel Per Cubic Meter (Bq/m3) has a dimension of \(L{-3}T{-1}\) where \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. It essentially the same as the corresponding standard SI unit \(/s\cdot m{3}\).
1.0
\(Bq/m^3\)
0112/2///62720#UAB126
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--radioactivity_concentration--becquerel_per_cubic_meter.cfm
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
The SI derived unit of unit in the category of Radioactivity concentration.
Bq.m-3
Bq/m3
A19
Becquerel per Cubic Meter
Becquerel per Cubic Metre
TBD
1.0
Bq.s.m-3
Becquerels second per cubic metre
A unit of respiratory rate.
\(breaths/min\)
/min{breath}
min-1{breath}
Breath per Minute
Bahamas
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bahamian_dollar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahamian_dollar?oldid=492776024
Bahamian Dollar
\(\textit{British Thermal Unit}\) (BTU or Btu) is a traditional unit of energy equal to about \(1.0550558526 \textit{ kilojoule}\). It is approximately the amount of energy needed to heat 1 pound (0.454 kg) of water from \(39 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) to \(40 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) . The unit is most often used in the power, steam generation, heating and air conditioning industries. In scientific contexts the BTU has largely been replaced by the SI unit of energy, the \(joule\), though it may be used as a measure of agricultural energy production (BTU/kg). It is still used unofficially in metric English-speaking countries (such as Canada), and remains the standard unit of classification for air conditioning units manufactured and sold in many non-English-speaking metric countries.
1055.05585262
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_thermal_unit
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=31890
http://www.knowledgedoor.com/2/units_and_constants_handbook/british-thermal-unit_group.html
Btu_{it}
[Btu_IT]
British Thermal Unit (International Definition)
\({\bf BTU_{IT} \, Foot}\) is an Imperial unit for \(\textit{Thermal Energy Length}\) expressed as \(Btu-ft\).
321.581024
\(Btu-ft\)
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]
BTU Foot
\(BTU_{IT}\), Foot per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit</em> is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu_{it} \cdot ft/(hr \cdot ft^2 \cdot degF)\).
1.730734666
\(Btu(IT) ft/(hr ft^2 degF)\)
0112/2///62720#UAA115
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conductivity
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
British thermal unit (international table) foot per hour Square foot degree Fahrenheit is the unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units.
[Btu_IT].[ft_i].[ft_i]-2.h-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]/([ft_i]2.h.[degF])
J40
owl:sameAs: unit:BTU_IT-FT-PER-HR-FT2-DEG_F
BTU (IT) Foot per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU \, Inch}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Energy Length' expressed as \(Btu-in\).
26.7984187
\(Btu-in\)
[Btu_IT].[in_i]
BTU Inch
\(BTU_{th}\) Inch per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu_{it}-in/(hr-ft^{2}-degF)\). An International British thermal unit inch per second per square foot per degree Fahrenheit is a unit of thermal conductivity in the US Customary Units and British Imperial Units. \(1 Btu_{it} \cdot in/(hr \cdot ft^{2} \cdot degF)\) shows that one thermochemical BTU of heat per one hour moves through one square foot of material, which is one foot thick due to a temperature difference of one degree Fahrenheit.
0.144227889
\(Btu(it)-in-per-hr-ft2-degF\)
0112/2///62720#UAA117
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
\(Btu_{it} \cdot in/(hr \cdot ft^{2} \cdot degF)\)
BTU (th) Inch per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity', an International British thermal unit inch per second per square foot per degree Fahrenheit is a unit of thermal conductivity in the US Customary Units and British Imperial Units.
[Btu_IT].[in_i].[ft_i]-2.h-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT].[in_i]/([ft_i]2.h.[degF])
J41
owl:sameAs: unit:BTU_IT-IN-PER-HR-FT2-DEG_F
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Inch Per Hour Square Foot Degree Fahrenheit
\(BTU_{IT}\), Inch per Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit, is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu_{it}-in/(ft^{2}-s-degF)\).
519.220399911
\(Btu(it)-in-per-s-ft2-degF\)
0112/2///62720#UAA118
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
British thermal unit (international table) inch per second Square foot degree Fahrenheit is the unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units.
[Btu_IT].[in_i].[ft_i]-2.s-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT].[in_i]/([ft_i]2.s.[degF])
J42
BTU (IT) Inch per Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit
0.1442279
0112/2///62720#UAA117
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_IT].[in_i].h-1.[ft_i]-2.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT].[in_i]/(h.[ft_i]2.[degF])
J41
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Inch Per Hour Square Foot degree Fahrenheit
519.2204
0112/2///62720#UAA118
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_IT].[in_i].s-1.[ft_i]-2.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT].[in_i]/(s.[ft_i]2.[degF])
J42
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Inch Per Second Square Foot degree Fahrenheit
British Thermal Unit (IT) Per Fahrenheit Degree (\(Btu (IT)/^\circ F\)) is a measure of heat capacity. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit J/K by multiplying its value by a factor of 1899.10534.
1899.100535
\(Btu/degF\)
\(btu-per-degF\)
[Btu_IT].[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/[degF]
BTU (IT) per Degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Degree \, Rankine}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Heat Capacity' expressed as \(Btu/degR\).
1899.100535
\(btu-per-degR\)
[Btu_IT].[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/[degR]
BTU per Degree Rankine
\(\textbf{BTU per Square Foot}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Energy Per Area' expressed as \(Btu/ft^2\).
11356.5267
\(Btu/ft^{2}\)
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]-2
[Btu_IT]/[ft_i]2
BTU per Square Foot
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Square \, Foot \, Hour \, Degree \, Fahrenheit}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Coefficient Of Heat Transfer' expressed as \(Btu/(hr-ft^{2}-degF)\).
\(Btu/(hr-ft^{2}-degF)\)
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]-2.h-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/([ft_i]2.h.[degF])
BTU per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Square \, Foot \, Second \, Degree \, Fahrenheit}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Coefficient Of Heat Transfer' expressed as \(Btu/(ft^{2}-s-degF)\).
\(Btu/(ft^{2}-s-degF)\)
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]-2.s-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/([ft_i]2.s.[degF])
BTU per Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit
\(\textit{British Thermal Unit (IT) Per Cubic Foot}\) (\(Btu (IT)/ft^3\)) is a unit in the category of Energy density. It is also known as Btu per cubic foot, Btu/cubic foot. This unit is commonly used in the UK, US unit systems. It has a dimension of \(ML^{-1}T^{-2}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(J/m^3\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 37258.94579.
37258.94579
\(Btu(IT)-per-ft3\)
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--energy_density--british_thermal_unit_it_per_cubic_foot.cfm
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/fuel-efficiency--volume/c/
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]-3
[Btu_IT]/[ft_i]3
British Thermal Unit (IT) Per Cubic Foot
The British thermal unit (BTU or Btu) is a traditional unit of energy equal to about 1 055.05585 joules. It is approximately the amount of energy needed to heat 1 pound (0.454 kg) of water from \(39 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) (\(3.9 \,^{\circ}{\rm C}\)) to \(40 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) (\(4.4 \,^{\circ}{\rm C}\)). The unit is most often used in the power, steam generation, heating and air conditioning industries. In scientific contexts the BTU has largely been replaced by the SI unit of energy, the joule, though it may be used as a measure of agricultural energy production (BTU/kg).
0.29307107
\(Btu/hr\)
http://www.simetric.co.uk/sibtu.htm
[Btu_IT].h-1
[Btu_IT]/h
BTU per Hour
\(\textit{BTU per Hour Square Foot}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(Btu/(hr-ft^2)\).
3.15459075
\(Btu/(hr-ft^{2})\)
[Btu_IT].h-1.[ft_i]-2
[Btu_IT]/(h.[ft_i]2)
BTU per Hour Square Foot
0.555556
0112/2///62720#UAB099
unit of the heat transfer coefficient according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_IT].h-1.[ft_i]-2.[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/(h.[ft_i]2.[degR])
A23
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Hour Square Foot degree Rankine
The amount of energy generated by a pound of substance is measured in British thermal units (IT) per pound of mass. 1 \(Btu_{IT}/lb\) is equivalent to \(2.326 \times 10^3\) joule per kilogram (J/kg).
2326.0
\(Btu/lb\)
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--energy_density--british_thermal_unit_it_per_cubic_foot.cfm
[Btu_IT].[lb_av]-1
[Btu_IT]/[lb_av]
BTU-IT-PER-lb
British Thermal Unit (therm.) Per Pound Per Fahrenheit Degree (Btu (therm.)/lb- degF) is a unit in the category of Specific heat. This unit is commonly used in the UK unit system. British Thermal Unit (therm.) Per Pound Per Fahrenheit Degree (Btu (therm.)/lb-degF) has a dimension of \(L2T^{-2}Q^{-1}\) where \(L\) is length, \(T\) is time, and \(Q\) is temperature. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(J/kg-K\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 4183.99895.
\(Btu/(lb-degF)\)
[Btu_IT].[lb_av]-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/([lb_av].[degF])
BTU per Pound Degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Pound \, Degree \, Rankine}\) is a unit for 'Specific Heat Capacity' expressed as \(Btu/(lb-degR)\).
\(Btu/(lb-degR)\)
[Btu_IT].[lb_av]-1.[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/([lb_av].[degR])
BTU per Pound Degree Rankine
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Pound \,Mole}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Energy And Work Per Mass Amount Of Substance' expressed as \(Btu/(lb-mol)\).
\(Btu/(lb-mol)\)
[Btu_IT].[lb_av]-1.mol-1
[Btu_IT]/([lb_av].mol)
BTU per Pound Mole
237.18597062376833
0112/2///62720#UAB150
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units
[Btu_IT].[lbf_av]-1
[Btu_IT]/[lbf_av]
AZ
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Pound
4186.8
0112/2///62720#UAA119
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the product of the units avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units and degree Fahrenheit
[Btu_IT].[lbf_av]-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/([lbf_av].[degF])
J43
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Pound Degree Fahrenheit
426.9
0112/2///62720#UAB141
unit of the heat capacity as British thermal unit according to the international table related to degree Rankine according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units
[Btu_IT].[lbf_av]-1.[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/([lbf_av].[degR])
A21
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Pound Degree Rankine
17.58
0112/2///62720#UAA120
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit minute
[Btu_IT].min-1
[Btu_IT]/min
J44
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Minute
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Pound \, Mole \, Degree \, Fahrenheit}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Molar Heat Capacity' expressed as \(Btu/(lb-mol-degF)\).
\(Btu/(lb-mol-degF)\)
[Btu_IT].mol-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/(mol.[degF])
BTU per Pound Mole Degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU \, per \, Second}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Heat Flow Rate' expressed as \(Btu/s\).
1055.05585262
\(Btu/s\)
http://www.simetric.co.uk/sibtu.htm
[Btu_IT].s-1
[Btu_IT]/s
BTU per Second
178.66
0112/2///62720#UAB107
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_IT].s-1.[ft_i]-1.[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/(s.[ft_i].[degR])
A22
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Second Foot Degree Rankine
\(\textit{BTU per Second Square Foot}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(Btu/(s\cdot ft^2)\).
11356.5267
\(Btu/(s-ft^{2})\)
[Btu_IT].s-1.[ft_i]-2
[Btu_IT]/(s.[ft_i]2)
BTU per Second Square Foot
14.89
0112/2///62720#UAB098
unit of the heat transfer coefficient according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_IT].s-1.[ft_i]-2.[degR]-1
[Btu_IT]/(s.[ft_i]2.[degR])
A20
British Thermal Unit (international Table) Per Second Square Foot degree Rankine
1055.05585262
0112/2///62720#UAA113
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_m]
J39
British Thermal Unit (mean)
(\{\bf (BTU_{th}}\), British Thermal Unit (thermochemical definition), is a traditional unit of energy equal to about \(1.0543502645 kilojoule\). It is approximately the amount of energy needed to heat 1 pound (0.454 kg) of water from \(39 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) (\(39 \,^{\circ}{\rm C}\)) to \(40 \,^{\circ}{\rm F}\) (\(4.4 \,^{\circ}{\rm C}\)). The unit is most often used in the power, steam generation, heating and air conditioning industries. In scientific contexts the BTU has largely been replaced by the SI unit of energy, the \(joule\).
1054.3502645
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_thermal_unit
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=31890
http://www.knowledgedoor.com/2/units_and_constants_handbook/british-thermal-unit_group.html
Btu_{th}
[Btu_th]
British Thermal Unit (Thermochemical Definition)
\({ \bf BTU_{TH} \, Foot \, per \, Square \, Foot \, Hour \, Degree \, Fahrenheit}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu_{th} \cdot ft/(hr \cdot ft^2 \cdot degF)\).
1.729577206
\(Btu(IT) ft/(hr ft^2 degF)\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conductivity
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
[Btu_IT].[ft_i]-2.h-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_IT]/([ft_i]2.h.[degF])
BTU (TH) Foot per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit
1.73
0112/2///62720#UAA123
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_th].[ft_i].h-1.[ft_i]-2.[degF]-1
[Btu_th].[ft_i]/(h.[ft_i]2.[degF])
J46
British Thermal Unit (thermochemical) Foot Per Hour Square Foot degree Fahrenheit
\({\bf BTU_{th}}\), Inch per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit, is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu-in/(hr-ft^{2}-degF)\). A thermochemical British thermal unit inch per second per square foot per degree Fahrenheit is a unit of thermal conductivity in the US Customary Units and British Imperial Units. \(1 Btu_{th} \cdot in/(hr \cdot ft^{2} \cdot degF)\) shows that one thermochemical BTU of heat per one hour moves through one square foot of material, which is one foot thick due to a temperature difference of one degree Fahrenheit.
0.144131434
\(Btu(th)-in-per-hr-ft2-degF\)
0112/2///62720#UAA125
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
\(Btu_{th} \cdot in/(hr \cdot ft^{2} \cdot degF)\)
Unit of thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_th].[in_i].[ft_i]-2.h-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_th].[in_i]/([ft_i]2.h.[degF])
J48
BTU (TH) Inch per Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit
\(BTU_{TH}\) Inch per Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Conductivity' expressed as \(Btu_{th} \cdot in/(ft^{2} \cdot s \cdot degF)\).
518.8732
\(Btu(it)-in-per-s-ft2-degF\)
0112/2///62720#UAA126
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/thermal-conductivity/c/
Unit of thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
[Btu_th].[in_i].[ft_i]-2.s-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_th].[in_i]/([ft_i]2.s.[degF])
BTU (TH) Inch per Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit
British Thermal Unit (TH) Per Cubic Foot (\(Btu (TH)/ft^3\)) is a unit in the category of Energy density. It is also known as Btu per cubic foot, Btu/cubic foot. This unit is commonly used in the UK, US unit systems. It has a dimension of \(ML^{-1}T^{-2}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(J/m^3\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 37234.03.
37234.03
\(Btu(th)-per-ft3\)
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--energy_density--british_thermal_unit_it_per_cubic_foot.cfm
http://www.translatorscafe.com/cafe/EN/units-converter/fuel-efficiency--volume/c/
[Btu_th].[ft_i]-3
[Btu_th]/[ft_i]3
British Thermal Unit (TH) Per Cubic Foot
0.2929
0112/2///62720#UAA124
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit hour
[Btu_th].h-1
[Btu_th]/h
J47
British Thermal Unit (thermochemical) Per Hour
\({\bf Btu_{th} / lbm}\), British Thermal Unit (therm.) Per Pound Mass, is a unit in the category of Thermal heat capacity. It is also known as Btu per pound, Btu/pound, Btu/lb. This unit is commonly used in the UK unit system. British Thermal Unit (therm.) Per Pound Mass (Btu (therm.)/lbm) has a dimension of \(L^2T^{-2}\) where \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit J/kg by multiplying its value by a factor of 2324.443861.
2324.443861
\(btu_th-per-lb\)
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--thermal_heat_capacity--british_thermal_unit_therm_per_pound_mass.cfm
[Btu_th].[lb_av]-1
[Btu_th]/[lb_av]
British Thermal Unit (TH) Per Pound
426.654
0112/2///62720#UAA127
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units divided by the units pound and degree Fahrenheit
[Btu_th].[lb_av]-1.[degF]-1
[Btu_th]/([lb_av].[degF])
J50
British Thermal Unit (thermochemical) Per Pound Degree Fahrenheit
17.573
0112/2///62720#UAA128
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit minute
[Btu_th].min-1
[Btu_th]/min
J51
British Thermal Unit (thermochemical) Per Minute
1054.35
0112/2///62720#UAA129
unit of the heat energy according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[Btu_th].s-1
[Btu_th]/s
J52
British Thermal Unit (thermochemical) Per Second
A bushel is an imperial unit of dry volume, equivalent in each of these systems to 4 pecks or 8 gallons. It is used for volumes of dry commodities (not liquids), most often in agriculture. It is abbreviated as bsh. or bu. In modern usage, the dry volume is usually only nominal, with bushels referring to standard weights instead.
0.03636872
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bushel
0112/2///62720#UAA344
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushel?oldid=476704875
bui
[bu_br]
BUI
bushel (UK)
0.0000004209343
0112/2///62720#UAA345
unit of the volume bushel (UK) (for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[bu_br].d-1
[bu_br]/d
J64
Bushel (UK) Per Day
0.00001010242
0112/2///62720#UAA346
unit of the volume bushel (UK) (for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
J65
Bushel (UK) Per Hour
0.0006061453
0112/2///62720#UAA347
unit of the volume bushel (UK) (for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[bu_br].min-1
[bu_br]/min
J66
Bushel (UK) Per Minute
0.03636872
0112/2///62720#UAA348
unit of the volume bushel (UK) (for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[bu_br].s-1
[bu_br]/s
J67
Bushel (UK) Per Second
A bushel is an imperial and U.S. customary unit of dry volume, equivalent in each of these systems to 4 pecks or 8 gallons. It is used for volumes of dry commodities (not liquids), most often in agriculture. It is abbreviated as bsh. or bu. In modern usage, the dry volume is usually only nominal, with bushels referring to standard weights instead.
0.03523907
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bushel
0112/2///62720#UAA353
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushel?oldid=476704875
bua
[bu_us]
BUA
bushel (US)
0.00000040786
0112/2///62720#UAA349
unit of the volume bushel (US dry) for dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time day
[bu_us].d-1
[bu_us]/d
J68
Bushel (US Dry) Per Day
0.000009789
0112/2///62720#UAA350
unit of the volume bushel (US dry) for dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[bu_us].h-1
[bu_us]/h
J69
Bushel (US Dry) Per Hour
0.00058732
0112/2///62720#UAA351
unit of the volume bushel (US dry) for dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[bu_us].min-1
[bu_us]/min
J70
Bushel (US Dry) Per Minute
0.03523907
0112/2///62720#UAA352
unit of the volume bushel (US dry) for dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[bu_us].s-1
[bu_us]/s
J71
Bushel (US Dry) Per Second
Belarus
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Belarusian_ruble
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belarusian_ruble?oldid=494143246
Belarussian Ruble
The byte is a unit of digital information in computing and telecommunications that most commonly consists of eight bits.
5.5451774444795624753378569716654
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Byte
0112/2///62720#UAA354
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte?oldid=493588918
B
By
AD
Byte
Belize
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Belize_dollar
\(BZD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belize_dollar?oldid=462662376
Belize Dollar
Bermuda
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bermudian_dollar
\(BMD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bermudian_dollar?oldid=492670344
Bermuda Dollar
Bolivia
2
\(BOV\)
Bolivian Mvdol (Funds code)
Bolivia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bolivian_boliviano
\(BOB\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivian_boliviano?oldid=494873944
Boliviano
Brazil
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Brazilian_real
\(BRL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_real?oldid=495278259
Brazilian Real
Brunei
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Brunei_dollar
\(BND\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunei_dollar?oldid=495134546
Brunei Dollar
Bulgaria
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bulgarian_lev
\(BGN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian_lev?oldid=494947467
Bulgarian Lev
Burundi
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Burundian_franc
\(BIF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burundian_franc?oldid=489383699
Burundian Franc
The SI unit of electric charge. One coulomb is the amount of charge accumulated in one second by a current of one ampere. Electricity is actually a flow of charged particles, such as electrons, protons, or ions. The charge on one of these particles is a whole-number multiple of the charge e on a single electron, and one coulomb represents a charge of approximately 6.241 506 x 1018 e. The coulomb is named for a French physicist, Charles-Augustin de Coulomb (1736-1806), who was the first to measure accurately the forces exerted between electric charges.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Coulomb
0112/2///62720#UAA130
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb?oldid=491815163
C
C
COU
Coulomb
Coulomb Meter (C-m) is a unit in the category of Electric dipole moment. It is also known as atomic unit, u.a., au, ua. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Coulomb Meter (C-m) has a dimension of LTI where L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA133
C m
C.m
A26
Coulomb Meter
Coulomb Metre
Coulomb Square Meter (C-m2) is a unit in the category of Electric quadrupole moment. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Coulomb Square Meter (C-m2) has a dimension of L2TI where L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(C m^{2}\)
C.m2
Coulomb Square Meter
Coulomb Square Metre
Coulomb Square Meter (C-m2-per-volt) is a unit in the category of Electric polarizability.
1.0
\(C m^{2} v^{-1}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB486
C.m2.V-1
C.m2/V
A27
Coulomb Square Meter Per Volt
Coulomb Square Metre Per Volt
10000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB101
derived SI unit coulomb divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
C.cm-2
C/cm2
A33
Coulomb Per Square Centimeter
Coulomb Per Square Centimetre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB120
derived SI unit coulomb divided by the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 3
C.m-3
C/cm3
A28
Coulomb Per Cubic Centimeter
Coulomb Per Cubic Centimetre
\(\textbf{Coulomb Per Kilogram (C/kg)}\) is the unit in the category of Exposure. It is also known as coulombs per kilogram, coulomb/kilogram. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Coulomb Per Kilogram (C/kg) has a dimension of \(M^{-1}TI\) where \(M\) is mass, \(T\) is time, and \(I\) is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(C/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAA131
C.kg-1
C/kg
CKG
Coulomb per Kilogram
The SI unit of exposure rate
\(C/kg-s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA132
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Basic_Physics_of_Nuclear_Medicine/Units_of_Radiation_Measurement
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
C.kg-1.s-1
C/(kg.s)
A31
Coulomb Per Kilogram Second
"Coulomb per Meter" is a unit for 'Electric Charge Line Density' expressed as \(C/m\).
1.0
\(C/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAB337
C.m-1
C/m
Coulomb per Meter
Coulomb per Metre
Coulomb Per Square Meter (\(C/m^2\)) is a unit in the category of Electric charge surface density. It is also known as coulombs per square meter, coulomb per square metre, coulombs per square metre, coulomb/square meter, coulomb/square metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Coulomb Per Square Meter (C/m2) has a dimension of \(L^{-2}TI\) where L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(C/m^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA134
C.m-2
C/m2
A34
Coulomb per Square Meter
Coulomb per Square Metre
Coulomb Per Cubic Meter (\(C/m^{3}\)) is a unit in the category of Electric charge density. It is also known as coulomb per cubic metre, coulombs per cubic meter, coulombs per cubic metre, coulomb/cubic meter, coulomb/cubic metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Coulomb Per Cubic Meter has a dimension of \(L^{-3}TI\) where \(L\) is length, \(T\) is time, and \(I\) is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(C/m^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA135
C.m-3
C/m3
A29
Coulomb per Cubic Meter
Coulomb per Cubic Metre
(\(C/mol\)) is a unit in the category of Molar electric charge. It is also known as \(coulombs/mol\). Coulomb Per Mol has a dimension of \(TN{-1}I\) where \(T\) is time, \(N\) is amount of substance, and \(I\) is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(c-per-mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAB142
C.mol-1
C/mol
A32
Coulomb per Mole
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB100
derived SI unit coulomb divided by the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
C.mm-2
C/mm2
A35
Coulomb Per Square Millimeter
Coulomb Per Square Millimetre
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB119
derived SI unit coulomb divided by the 0.000 000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 3
C.mm-3
C/mm3
A30
Coulomb Per Cubic Millimeter
Coulomb Per Cubic Millimetre
"Square Coulomb Meter per Joule" is a unit for 'Polarizability' expressed as \(C^{2} m^{2} J^{-1}\).
1.0
\(C^{2} m^{2} J^{-1}\)
C2.m.J-1
C2.m/J
Square Coulomb Meter per Joule
Square Coulomb Metre per Joule
"Cubic Coulomb Meter per Square Joule" is a unit for 'Cubic Electric Dipole Moment Per Square Energy' expressed as \(C^{3} m^{3} J^{-2}\).
1.0
\(C^{3} m^{3} J^{-2}\)
C3.m.J-2
C3.m/J2
Cubic Coulomb Meter per Square Joule
Cubic Coulomb Metre per Square Joule
"Quartic Coulomb Meter per Cubic Energy" is a unit for 'Quartic Electric Dipole Moment Per Cubic Energy' expressed as \(C^{4} m^{4} J^{-3}\).
1.0
\(C^4m^4/J^3\)
C4.m4.J-3
C4.m4/J3
Quartic Coulomb Meter per Cubic Energy
Quartic Coulomb Metre per Cubic Energy
Canada
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Canadian_dollar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_dollar?oldid=494738466
Canadian Dollar
4.1855
0112/2///62720#UAB139
unit for the quantity of heat which is required to warm up 1 g of water, which is free of air, at a constant pressure of 101.325 kPa (the pressure of the standard atmosphere on sea level) from 14.5 degrees Celsius to 15.5 degrees Celsius
cal_[15]
A1
Calorie (15 Degrees C)
International Table calorie.
4.1868
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
cal_IT
International Table calorie
Calories produced per gram of substance.
4186.8
\(cal_{it}-per-gm\)
0112/2///62720#UAB176
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--thermal_heat_capacity--british_thermal_unit_therm_per_pound_mass.cfm
unit calorie according to the international steam table divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
cal_IT.g-1
cal_IT/g
D75
Calorie (international Table) Per Gram
4186.8
0112/2///62720#UAA362
unit calorieIT divided by the products of the units gram and degree Celsius
cal_IT.g-1.Cel-1
cal_IT/(g.Cel)
J76
Calorie (international Table) Per Gram Degree Celsius
4186.8
0112/2///62720#UAA363
unit calorieIT divided by the product of the SI base unit gram and Kelvin
cal_IT.g-1.K-1
cal_IT/(g.K)
D76
Calorie (international Table) Per Gram Kelvin
418.68
0112/2///62720#UAB108
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
cal_IT.s-1.cm-1.K-1
cal_IT/(s.cm.K)
D71
Calorie (international Table) Per Second Centimeter Kelvin
Calorie (international Table) Per Second Centimetre Kelvin
41868.0
0112/2///62720#UAB096
unit of the heat transfer coefficient according to the Imperial system of units
cal_IT.s-1.cm-2.K-1
cal_IT/(s.cm2.K)
D72
Calorie (international Table) Per Second Square Centimeter kelvin
Calorie (international Table) Per Second Square Centimetre kelvin
4.19
0112/2///62720#UAA360
unit used particularly for calorific values of foods
cal_m
J75
Calorie (mean)
The energy needed to increase the temperature of a given mass of water by \(1 ^\circ C\) at atmospheric pressure depends on the starting temperature and is difficult to measure precisely. Accordingly, there have been several definitions of the calorie. The two perhaps most popular definitions used in older literature are the \(15 ^\circ C\) calorie and the thermochemical calorie.
4.184
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calorie
\(1 \; cal_{th} = 4.184 J\)
\(\approx 0.003964 BTU\)
\(\approx 1.163 \times 10^{-6} kWh\)
\(\approx 2.611 \times 10^{19} eV\)
cal_{th}
cal_th
Thermochemical Calorie
418.4
0112/2///62720#UAA365
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
cal_th.cm-1.s-1.Cel-1
cal_th/(cm.s.Cel)
J78
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Centimeter Second Degree Celsius
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Centimetre Second Degree Celsius
\(Thermochemical Calorie. Calories produced per gram of substance.\)
unit:CAL_TH-PER-GM
4184.0
\(cal\)
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--thermal_heat_capacity--british_thermal_unit_therm_per_pound_mass.cfm
cal_th.g-1
cal_th/g
calorie (thermochemical) per gram (calTH/g)
true
2020-10-30 - incorrect local-name - G is for Gravity, GM is for gram - the correct named individual was already present, so this one deprecated.
Thermochemical Calorie. Calories produced per gram of substance.
4184.0
\(cal\)
0112/2///62720#UAB153
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--thermal_heat_capacity--british_thermal_unit_therm_per_pound_mass.cfm
unit thermochemical calorie divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
cal_th.g-1
cal_th/g
B36
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Gram
4184.0
0112/2///62720#UAA366
unit calorie (thermochemical) divided by the product of the unit gram and degree Celsius
cal_th.g-1.Cel-1
cal_th/(g.Cel)
J79
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Gram Degree Celsius
4184.0
0112/2///62720#UAA367
unit calorie (thermochemical) divided by the product of the SI derived unit gram and the SI base unit Kelvin
cal_th.g-1.K-1
cal_th/(g.K)
D37
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Gram Kelvin
0.06973
0112/2///62720#UAA368
unit calorie divided by the unit minute
cal_th.min-1
cal_th/min
J81
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Minute
4.184
0112/2///62720#UAA369
unit calorie divided by the SI base unit second
cal_th.s-1
cal_th/s
J82
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Second
418.4
0112/2///62720#UAB109
unit of the thermal conductivity according to the Imperial system of units
cal_th.s-1.cm-1.K-1
cal_th/(s.cm.K)
D38
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Second Centimeter Kelvin
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Second Centimetre Kelvin
41840.0
0112/2///62720#UAB097
unit of the heat transfer coefficient according to the Imperial system of units
cal_th.s-1.cm-2.K-1
cal_th/(s.cm2.K)
D39
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Second Square Centimeter kelvin
Calorie (thermochemical) Per Second Square Centimetre kelvin
The carat is a unit of mass equal to 200 mg and is used for measuring gemstones and pearls. The current definition, sometimes known as the metric carat, was adopted in 1907 at the Fourth General Conference on Weights and Measures, and soon afterward in many countries around the world. The carat is divisible into one hundred points of two milligrams each. Other subdivisions, and slightly different mass values, have been used in the past in different locations. In terms of diamonds, a paragon is a flawless stone of at least 100 carats (20 g). The ANSI X.12 EDI standard abbreviation for the carat is \(CD\).
0.0002
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carat
\(Nm/ct\)
0112/2///62720#UAB166
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carat?oldid=477129057
[car_m]
CTM
Carat
metric carat
The typical expression of morbidity rate, expressed as cases per 1000 individuals, per year.
0.001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incidence_(epidemiology)
The typical expression of morbidity rate, expressed as cases per 1000 individuals, per year.
Cases per 1000 individuals per year
\(\textit{Candela}\) is a unit for 'Luminous Intensity' expressed as \(cd\). The candela is the SI base unit of luminous intensity; that is, power emitted by a light source in a particular direction, weighted by the luminosity function (a standardized model of the sensitivity of the human eye to different wavelengths, also known as the luminous efficiency function). A common candle emits light with a luminous intensity of roughly one candela.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Candela
0112/2///62720#UAA370
0112/2///62720#UAD719
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candela?oldid=484253082
http://www.simetric.co.uk/siderived.htm
cd
cd
CDL
Candela
"Candela per Square Inch" is a unit for 'Luminance' expressed as \(cd/in^{2}\).
1550.0031000062002
\(cd/in^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB257
cd.[in_i]-2
cd/[in_i]2
Candela per Square Inch
The candela per square metre (\(cd/m^2\)) is the derived SI unit of luminance. The unit is based on the candela, the SI unit of luminous intensity, and the square metre, the SI unit of area. Nit (nt) is a deprecated non-SI name also used for this unit (\(1 nit = 1 cd/m^2\)). As a measure of light emitted per unit area, this unit is frequently used to specify the brightness of a display device. Most consumer desktop liquid crystal displays have luminances of 200 to 300 \(cd/m^2\); the sRGB spec for monitors targets 80 cd/m2. HDTVs range from 450 to about 1000 cd/m2. Typically, calibrated monitors should have a brightness of \(120 cd/m^2\). \(Nit\) is believed to come from the Latin word nitere, to shine.
1.0
\(cd/m^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA371
cd.m-2
cd/m2
A24
candela per square meter
candela per square metre
"Colony Forming Unit" is a unit for 'Microbial Formation' expressed as \(CFU\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Colony-forming_unit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony-forming_unit?oldid=473146689
CFU
[CFU]
Colony Forming Unit
A chain is a unit of length. It measures 66 feet, or 22 yards, or 100 links, or 4 rods. There are 10 chains in a furlong, and 80 chains in one statute mile. An acre is the area of 10 square chains (that is, an area of one chain by one furlong). The chain has been used for several centuries in Britain and in some other countries influenced by British practice.
20.1168
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chain
0112/2///62720#UAB203
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain?oldid=494116185
ch
[ch_br]
X1
chain
Gunter's chain
A C.G.S System unit for \(\textit{Thermal Insulance}\) expressed as "clo".
0.155
0112/2///62720#UAA374
clo
J83
Clo
cmH2O
Centimeter of Water
Centimetre of Water
true
The cord is a unit of measure of dry volume used in Canada and the United States to measure firewood and pulpwood. A cord is the amount of wood that, when 'ranked and well stowed' (arranged so pieces are aligned, parallel, touching and compact), occupies a volume of 128 cubic feet (3.62 cubic metres). This corresponds to a well stacked woodpile 4 feet (122 cm) wide, 4 feet (122 cm) high, and 8 feet (244 cm) long; or any other arrangement of linear measurements that yields the same volume. The name cord probably comes from the use of a cord or string to measure it.
3.62
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cord
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cord?oldid=490232340
C
[crd_us]
Cord
"Candlepower" (abbreviated as cp) is a now-obsolete unit which was used to express levels of light intensity in terms of the light emitted by a candle of specific size and constituents. In modern usage Candlepower equates directly to the unit known as the candela.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Candlepower
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlepower?oldid=491140098
cd
Candlepower
"US Liquid Cup" is a unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(cup\).
0.00023658825
cup
[cup_us]
US Liquid Cup
0.0002365882
0112/2///62720#UAA404
unit of the volume according to the Anglo-American system of units
[cup_us]
G21
Cup (US)
"Hundred Weight - Long" is a unit for 'Mass' expressed as \(cwt\).
50.80235
\(cwt long\)
[lcwt_av]
Long Hundred Weight
British hundredweight
"Hundred Weight - Short" is a unit for 'Mass' expressed as \(cwt\).
45.359237
\(cwt\)
[scwt_av]
Hundred Weight - Short
U.S. hundredweight
"abcoulomb" (abC or aC) or electromagnetic unit of charge (emu of charge) is the basic physical unit of electric charge in the cgs-emu system of units. One abcoulomb is equal to ten coulombs (\(1\,abC\,=\,10\,C\)).
10.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abcoulomb
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abcoulomb?oldid=477198635
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-9?rskey=KHjyOu
abC
10.C
Abcoulomb
Abcoulomb Per Square Centimeter is a unit in the category of Electric charge surface density. It is also known as abcoulombs per square centimeter, abcoulomb per square centimetre, abcoulombs per square centimetre, abcoulomb/square centimeter,abcoulomb/square centimetre. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system.
Abcoulomb Per Square Centimeter (abcoulomb/cm2) has a dimension of \(L_2TI\). where L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(C/m^2\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 100,000.
100000
\(abc-per-cm2\)
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_charge_surface_density--abcoulomb_per_square_centimeter.cfm
\(abcoulomb/cm^2\)
10.C.cm-2
Abcoulomb per Square Centimeter
Abcoulomb per Square Centimetre
The statcoulomb (\(statC\)) or franklin (\(Fr\)) or electrostatic unit of charge (\(esu\)) is the physical unit for electrical charge used in the centimetre-gram-second system of units (cgs) and Gaussian units. It is a derived unit given by \(1\ statC = 1\ g\ cm\ s = 1\ erg\ cm\). The SI system of units uses the coulomb (C) instead. The conversion between C and statC is different in different contexts. The number 2997924580 is 10 times the value of the speed of light expressed in meters/second, and the conversions are exact except where indicated. The coulomb is an extremely large charge rarely encountered in electrostatics, while the statcoulomb is closer to everyday charges.
0.00000000033356409519815204957557671447492
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Statcoulomb
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statcoulomb?oldid=492664360
\(1 C \leftrightarrow 2997924580 statC \approx 3.00 \times 10^9 statC,\ 1 \hspace{0.3pc} statC \leftrightarrow \hspace{0.3pc} \approx 3.34 \times 10^{-10} C\) for electric charge.
\(1 C \leftrightarrow 4 \pi \times 2997924580 statC \approx 3.77 \times 10^{10} statC,\ 1 \hspace{0.3pc} statC \leftrightarrow \hspace{0.2pc} \approx 2.6 \times 10^{-11} C\) for electric flux \(\Phi_D\)
\(1 C/m \leftrightarrow 4 \pi \times 2997924580 \times 10^{-4} statC/cm \approx 3.77 \times 10^6 statC/cm,\ 1 \hspace{0.3pc} statC/cm \leftrightarrow \hspace{0.3pc} \approx 2.65 \times 10^{-7} C/m\) for electric displacement field \(D\).
statC
Statcoulomb
\(\textbf{Statcoulomb per Square Centimeter}\) is a unit of measure for electric flux density and electric polarization. One Statcoulomb per Square Centimeter is \(2.15\times 10^9 \, coulomb\,per\,square\,inch\).
0.00000333564
\(statc-per-cm2\)
Statcoulomb per Square Centimeter
Statcoulomb per Square Centimetre
"Statcoulomb per Mole" is a unit of measure for the electical charge associated with one mole of a substance. The mole is a unit of measurement used in chemistry to express amounts of a chemical substance, defined as an amount of a substance that contains as many elementary entities (e.g., atoms, molecules, ions, electrons) as there are atoms in 12 grams of pure carbon-12 (12C), the isotope of carbon with atomic weight 12.
0.000000000333564
\(statC/mol\)
Statcoulomb per Mole
Cape Verde
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cape_Verdean_escudo
\(CVE\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Verdean_escudo?oldid=491416749
Cape Verde Escudo
Cayman Islands
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cayman_Islands_dollar
\(KYD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cayman_Islands_dollar?oldid=494206112
Cayman Islands Dollar
Ghana
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ghanaian_cedi
\(GHS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghanaian_cedi?oldid=415914569
Cedi
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to 100,000 Pa. It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000\,Pa = 1 bar \approx 750.0616827 Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
1000.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
cbar
cbar
Centibar
A CentiCoulomb is \(10^{-2} C\).
0.01
cC
cC
CentiCoulomb
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAB077
0,000 01-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
cg
CGM
Centigram
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAA373
0,01-fold of the unit litre
cL
CLT
Centilitre
Centilitre
A centimetre is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one hundredth of a metre, which is the SI base unit of length. Centi is the SI prefix for a factor of 10. The centimetre is the base unit of length in the now deprecated centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units.
0.01
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Centimetre
0112/2///62720#UAA375
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centimetre?oldid=494931891
cm
cm
CMT
Centimeter
Centimetre
0.000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA378
0,01-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the unit hour
cm.h-1
cm/h
H49
Centimeter Per Hour
Centimetre Per Hour
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA376
0,01-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
cm.K-1
cm/K
F51
Centimeter Per Kelvin
Centimetre Per Kelvin
Unavailable
0.000000000000316880878140289
cm.ka-1
Centimetres per thousand years
"Centimeter per Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as \(cm/s\).
0.01
\(cm/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA379
\(cm/s\)
cm.s-1
cm/s
2M
centimeter per second
centimetre per second
\(\textit{Centimeter per Square Second}\) is a C.G.S System unit for \(\textit{Linear Acceleration}\) expressed as \(cm/s^2\).
0.01
\(cm/s^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB398
cm.s-2
cm/s2
Centimeter per Square Second
Centimetre per Square Second
\(\textbf{Centimeter Second Degree Celsius}\) is a C.G.S System unit for 'Length Temperature Time' expressed as \(cm-s-degC\).
\(cm-s-degC\)
cm.s.Cel-1
cm.s/Cel
Centimeter Second Degree Celsius
Centimetre Second Degree Celsius
A unit of area equal to that of a square, of sides 1cm
0.0001
\(sqcm\)
0112/2///62720#UAA384
cm2
CMK
Square Centimeter
Square Centimetre
"Square centimeter minute" is a unit for 'Area Time' expressed as \(cm^{2} . m\).
0.006
\(cm^{2}m\)
cm2.min
Square Centimeter Minute
Square Centimetre Minute
Unavailable
100.0
cm2.cm-3
Square centimetres per cubic centimetre
Unavailable
0.0001
cm2.s-1
Square centimetres per second
"Square Centimeter Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Area Time' expressed as \(cm^2 . s\).
0.0001
\(cm^2 . s\)
cm2.s
Square Centimeter Second
Square Centimetre Second
The CGS unit of volume, equal to 10-6 cubic meter, 1 milliliter, or about 0.061 023 7 cubic inch
0.000001
\(cubic-cm\)
0112/2///62720#UAA385
cm3
CMQ
cubic centimeter
cubic centimetre
0.00000000001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA388
0,000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit day
cm3.d-1
cm3/d
G47
Cubic Centimeter Per Day
Cubic Centimetre Per Day
0.0000000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA391
0,000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit hour
cm3.h-1
cm3/h
G48
Cubic Centimeter Per Hour
Cubic Centimetre Per Hour
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA386
0,000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit kelvin
cm3.K-1
cm3/K
G27
Cubic Centimeter Per Kelvin
Cubic Centimetre Per Kelvin
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA394
volume ratio consisting of the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
cm3.m-3
cm3/m3
J87
Cubic Centimeter Per Cubic Meter
Cubic Centimetre Per Cubic Metre
0.00000001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA395
0,000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit minute
cm3.min-1
cm3/min
G49
Cubic Centimeter Per Minute
Cubic Centimetre Per Minute
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA398
0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit mol
cm3.mol-1
cm3/mol
A36
Cubic Centimeter Per Mole
Cubic Centimetre Per Mole
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA399
0,000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
cm3.s-1
cm3/s
2J
Cubic Centimeter Per Second
Cubic Centimetre Per Second
0.01
1/100 of SI unit of amount of substance per kilogram
cmol.kg-1
cmol/kg
Centimole per kilogram
\(\textbf{Centimeter of Water}\) is a C.G.S System unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(cm_{H2O}\).
98.0665
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Centimetre_of_water
0112/2///62720#UAA402
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centimetre_of_water?oldid=487656894
non SI conforming unit of pressure that corresponds to the static pressure generated by a water column with a height of 1 centimetre
cmH2O
cm[H2O]
H78
Centimeter of Water
Centimetre of Water
Conventional Centimeter Of Water
Conventional Centimetre Of Water
1333.224
0112/2///62720#UAA403
not SI conform unit of the pressure, that corresponds with the static pressure generated by a mercury column with the height of 1 centimetre
cm[Hg]
J89
Centimeter Of Mercury
Centimetre Of Mercury
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA355
0,01-fold of the product of the SI derived unit newton and SI base unit metre
cN.m
J72
Centinewton Meter
Centinewton Metre
\(\textbf{Centipoise}\) is a C.G.S System unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(cP\).
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA356
0,01-fold of the CGS unit of the dynamic viscosity poise
cP
cP
C7
Centipoise
0.00000001
0112/2///62720#UAA358
0.01-fold of the CGS unit of the dynamic viscosity poise divided by the unit of the pressure bar
cP.bar-1
cP/bar
J74
Centipoise Per Bar
\(\textbf{Centistokes}\) is a C.G.S System unit for 'Kinematic Viscosity' expressed as \(cSt\).
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA359
cSt
cSt
4C
Centistokes
Chile
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chilean_peso
\(CLP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilean_peso?oldid=495455481
Chilean Peso
The curie (symbol Ci) is a non-SI unit of radioactivity, named after Marie and Pierre Curie. It is defined as \(1Ci = 3.7 \times 10^{10} decays\ per\ second\). Its continued use is discouraged. One Curie is roughly the activity of 1 gram of the radium isotope Ra, a substance studied by the Curies. The SI derived unit of radioactivity is the becquerel (Bq), which equates to one decay per second. Therefore: \(1Ci = 3.7 \times 10^{10} Bq= 37 GBq\) and \(1Bq \equiv 2.703 \times 10^{-11}Ci \).
37000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Curie
0112/2///62720#UAA138
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curie?oldid=495080313
Ci
Ci
CUR
Curie
Colombia
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Colombian_peso
\(COP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colombian_peso?oldid=490834575
Colombian Peso
Comoros
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Comorian_franc
\(KMF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comorian_franc?oldid=489502162
Comoro Franc
Bosnia and Herzegovina
2
\(BAM\)
Convertible Marks
Nicaragua
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nicaraguan_c%C3%B3rdoba
\(NIO\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicaraguan_córdoba?oldid=486140595
Cordoba Oro
Costa Rica
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Costa_Rican_col%C3%B3n
\(CRC\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_Rican_colón?oldid=491007608
Costa Rican Colon
Croatia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Croatian_kuna
\(HRK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_kuna?oldid=490959527
Croatian Kuna
Cuba
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cuban_peso
\(CUP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban_peso?oldid=486492974
Cuban Peso
Cyprus
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cypriot_pound
\(CYP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriot_pound?oldid=492644935
Cyprus Pound
Czech Republic
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Czech_koruna
\(CZK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czech_koruna?oldid=493991393
Czech Koruna
Mean solar day
86400.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Day
0112/2///62720#UAA407
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day?oldid=494970012
d
d
DAY
Day
The length of time which passes between a given fixed star in the sky crossing a given projected meridian (line of longitude). The sidereal day is \(23 h 56 m 4.1 s\), slightly shorter than the solar day because the Earth 's orbital motion about the Sun means the Earth has to rotate slightly more than one turn with respect to the "fixed" stars in order to reach the same Earth-Sun orientation. Another way of thinking about the difference is that it amounts to \(1/365.2425^{th}\) of a day per day, since even if the Earth did not spin on its axis at all, the Sun would appear to make one rotation around the Earth as the Earth completed a single orbit (which takes one year).
0112/2///62720#UAA412
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_time
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/astronomy/SiderealDay.html
d
d
DMT
Sidereal Day
The expression of mortality rate, expressed as deaths per 1,000,000 individuals, per year.
0.000001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortality_rate
The expression of mortality rate, expressed as deaths per Million individuals, per year.
Deaths per Million individuals per year
The typical expression of mortality rate, expressed as deaths per 1000 individuals, per year.
0.001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortality_rate
The typical expression of mortality rate, expressed as deaths per 1000 individuals, per year.
Deaths per 1000 individuals per year
One decade is a factor of 10 difference between two numbers (an order of magnitude difference) measured on a logarithmic scale. It is especially useful when referring to frequencies and when describing frequency response of electronic systems, such as audio amplifiers and filters. The factor-of-ten in a decade can be in either direction: so one decade up from 100 Hz is 1000 Hz, and one decade down is 10 Hz. The factor-of-ten is what is important, not the unit used, so \(3.14 rad/s\) is one decade down from \(31.4 rad/s\).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decade_(log_scale)
oct
Dec
A degree (in full, a degree of arc, arc degree, or arcdegree), usually denoted by \(^\circ\) (the degree symbol), is a measurement of plane angle, representing 1/360 of a full rotation; one degree is equivalent to \(2\pi /360 rad\), \(0.017453 rad\). It is not an SI unit, as the SI unit for angles is radian, but is an accepted SI unit.
0.0174532925
0112/2///62720#UAA024
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-331
°
deg
DD
Degree
"Degree per Hour" is an Imperial unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(deg/h\).
0.00000484813681
\(deg/h\)
deg.h-1
deg/h
Degree per Hour
A change of angle in one SI unit of length.
0.0174532925199433
deg.m-1
Degrees per metre
A unit of measure for the rate of change of plane angle, \(d\omega / dt\), in durations of one minute.The vector \(\omega\) is directed along the axis of rotation in the direction for which the rotation is clockwise.
0.000290888209
\(deg-per-min\)
deg.min-1
deg/min
Degree per Minute
"Degree per Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(deg/s\).
0.0174532925
\(deg/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA026
deg.s-1
deg/s
E96
Degree per Second
\(\textit{Degree per Square Second}\) is an Imperial unit for \(\textit{Angular Acceleration}\) expressed as \(deg/s^2\).
0.0174532925
\(deg/s^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB407
deg.s-2
deg/s2
Degree per Square Second
A square degree is a non-SI unit measure of solid angle. It is denoted in various ways, including deg, sq. deg. and \(\circ^2\). Just as degrees are used to measure parts of a circle, square degrees are used to measure parts of a sphere. Analogous to one degree being equal to \(\pi /180 radians\), a square degree is equal to (\(\pi /180)\) or about 1/3283 steradian. The number of square degrees in a whole sphere is or approximately 41 253 deg. This is the total area of the 88 constellations in the list of constellations by area. For example, observed from the surface of the Earth, the Moon has a diameter of approximately \(0.5^\circ\), so it covers a solid angle of approximately 0.196 deg, which is \(4.8 \times 10\) of the total sky sphere.
0.00030461742
\(deg^2\)
deg2
Square degree
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA027
unit for the determination of the density of petroleum at 60 degrees F (15.56 degrees C)
J13
Degree API
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA031
unit for the mixing ratio of a soluble dry substance in water at 17.5 degrees C similar to the percent designation for solutions, in which a solution of 1 g saccharose in 100 g saccharose/ water solution corresponds to 1 degree Balling and respectively a one percent solution
J17
Degree Balling
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA028
graduation of the areometer scale for determination of densitiy of fluids.
The Baumé scale is a pair of hydrometer scales developed by French pharmacist Antoine Baumé in 1768 to measure density of various liquids. The unit of the Baumé scale has been notated variously as degrees Baumé, B°, Bé° and simply Baumé (the accent is not always present). One scale measures the density of liquids heavier than water and the other, liquids lighter than water. The Baumé of distilled water is 0. The API gravity scale is based on errors in early implementations of the Baumé scale.
J14
Degree Baume (origin Scale)
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA029
graduation of the areometer scale for determination of density of fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units, which are heavier than water
J15
Degree Baume (US Heavy)
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA030
graduation of the areometer scale for determination of density of fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units, which are lighter than water
J16
Degree Baume (US Light)
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA032
unit named according to Adolf Brix for the mixing ratio of a soluble dry substance in water with 15.5 °C similar to the percent designation for solutions, in which a solution of 1 g saccharose in 100 g saccharose/water solution corresponds to 1 °Brix and respectively an one percent solution
J18
Degree Brix
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA048
unit of the density of the must, as measure for the proportion of the soluble material in the grape must
J27
Degree Oechsle
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA049
unit for the mixing ratio of the original gravity in the beer brew at 17,5 °C before the fermentation
PLA
Degree Plato
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA054
unit of the density of fluids, which are heavier than water
J31
Degree Twaddell
\(\textit{Celsius}\), also known as centigrade, is a scale and unit of measurement for temperature. It can refer to a specific temperature on the Celsius scale as well as a unit to indicate a temperature interval, a difference between two temperatures or an uncertainty. This definition fixes the magnitude of both the degree Celsius and the kelvin as precisely 1 part in 273.16 (approximately 0.00366) of the difference between absolute zero and the triple point of water. Thus, it sets the magnitude of one degree Celsius and that of one kelvin as exactly the same. Additionally, it establishes the difference between the two scales' null points as being precisely \(273.15\,^{\circ}{\rm C}\).</p>
1.0
273.15
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Celsius
\(degC\)
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec04.html#4.2.1.1">SP811 section 4.2.1.1</a></p>
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec06.html#6.2.8">SP811 section 6.2.8</a></p>
0112/2///62720#UAA033
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celsius?oldid=494152178
\(\,^{\circ}{\rm C}\)
Cel
CEL
Degree Celsius
degree-centigrade
\(\textbf{Degree Celsius Centimeter} is a C.G.S System unit for 'Length Temperature' expressed as \(cm-degC\).
\(cm-degC\)
Cel.cm
Degree Celsius Centimeter
Degree Celsius Centimetre
Derived unit for the product of the temperature in degrees Celsius and the mass density of a medium, integrated over vertical depth or height in metres.
1.0
Cel.kg.m-2
Degrees Celsius kilogram per square metre
\(\textbf{Degree Celsius per Hour} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degC / hr\).
\(degC / hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAA036
Cel.h-1
Cel/h
H12
Degree Celsius per Hour
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA034
unit with the name Degree Celsius divided by the SI base unit kelvin
Cel.K-1
Cel/K
E98
Degree Celsius Per Kelvin
Unavailable
1.0
Cel.m-1
Degrees Celsius per metre
\(\textbf{Degree Celsius per Minute} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degC / m\).
\(degC / m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA037
Cel.min-1
Cel/min
H13
Degree Celsius per Minute
\(\textbf{Degree Celsius per Second} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degC / s\).
\(degC / s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA038
Cel.s-1
Cel/s
H14
Degree Celsius per Second
A rate of change of temperature expressed on the Celsius scale over a period of an average calendar year (365.25 days).
0.0000000316880878140289
Cel.a-1
Degrees Celsius per year
temperature multiplied by unit of time.
604800.0
Cel.wk
Degree Celsius week
Unavailable
1.0
K2.s-1
Square Degrees Celsius per second
\(\textbf{Degree Fahrenheit} is an Imperial unit for 'Thermodynamic Temperature' expressed as \(\,^{\circ}{\rm F}\)
0.5555555555555556
459.669607
\(degF\)
0112/2///62720#UAA039
[degF]
FAH
Degree Fahrenheit
\(degF-hr\)
Degree Fahrenheit Hour
1.89563
0112/2///62720#UAA043
unit of the thermal resistor according to the Imperial system of units
[degF].h-1.[ft_i]-2.[Btu_IT]-1
[degF]/(h.[ft_i]2.[Btu_IT])
J22
Degree Fahrenheit Hour Square Foot per British Thermal Unit (international Table)
1.8969
0112/2///62720#UAA040
unit of the thermal resistor according to the according to the Imperial system of units
[degF].h-1.[ft_i]-2.[Btu_th]-1
[degF]/(h.[ft_i]2.[Btu_th])
J19
Degree Fahrenheit Hour Square Foot per British Thermal Unit (thermochemical)
\(\textbf{Degree Fahrenheit Hour per BTU} is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Resistance' expressed as \(degF-hr/Btu\).
\(degF-hr/Btu\)
[degF].h.[Btu_IT]-1
[degF].h/[Btu_IT]
Degree Fahrenheit Hour per BTU
\(\textbf{Degree Fahrenheit per Hour} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degF / h\).
\(degF / h\)
0112/2///62720#UAA044
[degF].h-1
[degF]/h
J23
Degree Fahrenheit per Hour
0.5555556
0112/2///62720#UAA041
traditional unit degree Fahrenheit for temperature according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit Kelvin
[degF].K-1
[degF]/K
J20
Degree Fahrenheit Per Kelvin
\(\textbf{Degree Fahrenheit per Minute} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degF / m\).
\(degF / m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA045
[degF].min-1
[degF]/min
J24
Degree Fahrenheit per Minute
\(\textbf{Degree Fahrenheit per Second} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(degF / s\).
\(degF / s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA046
[degF].s-1
[degF]/s
J25
Degree Fahrenheit per Second
\(\textit{Degree Fahrenheit per Square Second}\) is a C.G.S System unit for expressinh the acceleration of a temperature expressed as \(degF / s^2\).
\(degF / s^2\)
'Degree Fahrenheit per Square Second' is a unit for expressing the acceleration of a temperature expressed as 'degF /s2'.
[degF].s-2
[degF]/s2
Degree Fahrenheit per Square Second
Rankine is a thermodynamic (absolute) temperature scale. The symbol for degrees Rankine is \(^\circ R\) or \(^\circ Ra\) if necessary to distinguish it from the Rømer and Réaumur scales). Zero on both the Kelvin and Rankine scales is absolute zero, but the Rankine degree is defined as equal to one degree Fahrenheit, rather than the one degree Celsius used by the Kelvin scale. A temperature of \(-459.67 ^\circ F\) is exactly equal to \(0 ^\circ R\).
0.5555555555555556
0112/2///62720#UAA050
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_scale
°R
°Ra
[degR]
A48
Degree Rankine
\(A rate of change of temperature measured in degree Rankine in periods of one hour.\)
\(degR / h\)
0112/2///62720#UAA051
[degR].h-1
[degR]/h
J28
Degree Rankine per Hour
\(A rate of change of temperature measured in degree Rankine in periods of one minute\)
\(degR / m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA052
[degR].min-1
[degR]/min
J29
Degree Rankine per Minute
\(A rate of change of temperature measured in degree Rankine in periods of one second.\)
\(degR / s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA053
[degR].s-1
[degR]/s
J30
Degree Rankine per Second
A dioptre, or diopter, is a unit of measurement for the optical power of a lens or curved mirror, which is equal to the reciprocal of the focal length measured in metres (that is, \(1/metre\)). For example, a \(3 \; dioptre\) lens brings parallel rays of light to focus at \(1/3\,metre\). The same unit is also sometimes used for other reciprocals of distance, particularly radii of curvature and the vergence of optical beams. Though the diopter is based on the SI-metric system it has not been included in the standard so that there is no international name or abbreviation for this unit of measurement within the international system of units this unit for optical power would need to be specified explicitly as the inverse metre.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dioptre
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioptre?oldid=492506920
D
[diop]
Diopter
39.37008
0112/2///62720#UAA421
point density as amount of the picture base element divided by the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units
{dot}/[in_i]
E39
Dots Per Inch
0.0017718451953125
0112/2///62720#UAB181
non SI-conforming unit of mass comes from the Anglo-American Troy or Apothecaries' Weight System of units which is mainly used in England, in the Netherlands and in the USA as a commercial weight
[dr_ap]
DRI
Dram (UK)
0.0038879346
0112/2///62720#UAB180
non SI-conform unit of the mass according to the avoirdupois system of units: 1 dram (av. ) = 1/16 ounce (av. ) = 1/256 pound (av.)
[dr_av]
DRA
Dram (US)
"Penny Weight" is a unit for 'Mass' expressed as \(dwt\).
0.00155517384
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pennyweight
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennyweight?oldid=486693644
dwt
[pwt_tr]
Penny Weight
dryquartus
In physics, the dyne is a unit of force specified in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units. One dyne is equal to In physics, the dyne is a unit of force specified in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units. One dyne is equal to \SI{10}{\micro\newton}. Equivalently, the dyne is defined as 'the force required to accelerate a mass of one gram at a rate of one centimetre per square second'. The dyne per centimetre is the unit traditionally used to measure surface tension.
0.00001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dyne
0112/2///62720#UAA422
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyne?oldid=494703827
\(g\cdot cm/s^{2}\)
dyn
dyn
DU
Dyne
"Dyne Centimeter" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Torque' expressed as \(dyn-cm\).
0.0000001
\(dyn-cm\)
0112/2///62720#UAA423
dyn.cm
J94
Dyne Centimeter
Dyne Centimetre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAB106
CGS unit of the surface tension
dyn.cm-1
dyn/cm
DX
Dyne Per Centimeter
Dyne Per Centimetre
"Dyne per Square Centimeter" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(dyn/cm^{2}\).
0.1
\(dyn/cm^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA424
dyn.cm-2
dyn/cm2
D9
Dyne per Square Centimeter
Dyne per Square Centimetre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAB144
CGS unit of the mechanical impedance
dyn.s.cm-1
dyn.s/cm
A51
Dyne Second Per Centimeter
Dyne Second Per Centimetre
10.0
0112/2///62720#UAB102
CGS unit of the acoustic image impedance of the medium
dyn.s.cm-3
dyn.s/cm3
A50
Dyne Second Per Cubic Centimeter
Dyne Second Per Cubic Centimetre
Algeria
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Algerian_dinar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algerian_dinar?oldid=492845503
Algerian Dinar
The unified atomic mass unit (symbol: \(\mu\)) or dalton (symbol: Da) is a unit that is used for indicating mass on an atomic or molecular scale. It is defined as one twelfth of the rest mass of an unbound atom of carbon-12 in its nuclear and electronic ground state, and has a value of \(1.660538782(83) \times 10^{-27} kg\). One \(Da\) is approximately equal to the mass of one proton or one neutron. The CIPM have categorised it as a "non-SI unit whose values in SI units must be obtained experimentally".
0.00000000000000000000000000166053878283
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dalton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_mass_unit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalton?oldid=495038954
Da
u
Dalton
atomic-mass-unit
Gambia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gambian_dalasi
\(GMD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gambian_dalasi?oldid=489522429
Dalasi
Denmark, Faroe Islands, Greenland
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Danish_krone
\(DKK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_krone?oldid=491168880
Danish Krone
"Debye" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Electric Dipole Moment' expressed as \(D\).
0.00000000000000000000000000000333564
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Debye
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debye?oldid=492149112
D
Debye
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB049
unit of the area which is mainly common in the agriculture and forestry: 1 da = 10 a
daar
DAA
Decare
A DecaCoulomb is \(10 C\).
10.0
daC
daC
DecaCoulomb
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAB075
0,01-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
dag
DJ
Decagram
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAB115
10-fold of the unit litre
daL
A44
Decalitre
Decalitre
10.0
0112/2///62720#UAB064
10-fold of the SI base unit metre
dam
A45
Decameter
Decametre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB179
1 000-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 3
dam3
DMA
Cubic Decameter
Cubic Decametre
10.0
0112/2///62720#UAB375
10-fold of the derived SI unit pascal
daPa
H75
Decapascal
A customary logarithmic measure most commonly used (in various ways) for measuring sound.Sound is measured on a logarithmic scale. Informally, if one sound is \(1\,bel\) (10 decibels) "louder" than another, this means the louder sound is 10 times louder than the fainter one. A difference of 20 decibels corresponds to an increase of 10 x 10 or 100 times in intensity. The beginning of the scale, 0 decibels, can be set in different ways, depending on exactly the aspect of sound being measured. For sound intensity (the power of the sound waves per unit of area) \(0\,decibel\) is equal to \(1\,picoWatts\,per\,Metre\,Squared\). This corresponds approximately to the faintest sound that can be detected by a person who has good hearing. For sound pressure (the pressure exerted by the sound waves) 0 decibels equals \(20\,micropascals\,RMS\), and for sound power \(0\,decibels\) sometimes equals \(1\,picoWatt\). In all cases, one decibel equals \(\approx\,0.115129\,neper\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Decibel
0112/2///62720#UAA409
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decibel?oldid=495380648
dB
dB
2N
Decibel
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to 100,000 Pa. It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000 Pa = 1 bar \approx 750.0616827 Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
10000.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
dbar
dbar
Decibar
A rate of change of pressure expressed in decibars over a period of an average calendar year (365.25 days).
0.18
dbar.a-1
Decibars per year
"Decibel Carrier Unit" is a unit for 'Signal Detection Threshold' expressed as \(dBc\).
dBc
Decibel Carrier Unit
"Decibel Referred to 1mw" is a 'Dimensionless Ratio' expressed as \(dBm\).
dBm
Decibel Referred to 1mw
A DeciCoulomb is \(10^{-1} C\).
0.1
dC
dC
DeciCoulomb
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAB076
0.0001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
dg
DG
Decigram
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAB113
0.1-fold of the unit litre
dL
DLT
Decilitre
Decilitre
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAB094
0.1-fold of the unit of the volume litre divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
dL.g-1
dL/g
22
Decilitre Per Gram
Decilitre Per Gram
A decimeter is a tenth of a meter.
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAA412
dm
DMT
Decimeter
Decimetre
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA413
0.1-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
dm2
DMK
Square Decimeter
Square Decimetre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA414
0.1-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
dm3
DMQ
Cubic Decimeter
Cubic Decimetre
0.00000001157407407
0112/2///62720#UAA415
0,001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for time day
dm3.d-1
dm3/d
J90
Cubic Decimeter Per Day
Cubic Decimetre Per Day
0.0000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA416
0,001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit hour
dm3.h-1
dm3/h
E92
Cubic Decimeter Per Hour
Cubic Decimetre Per Hour
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA417
volume ratio consisting of the 0.001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
dm3.m-3
dm3/m3
J91
Cubic Decimeter Per Cubic Meter
Cubic Decimetre Per Cubic Metre
0.00001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA418
0,001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for time minute
dm3.min-3
dm3/min3
J92
Cubic Decimeter Per Minute
Cubic Decimetre Per Minute
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA419
0,001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit mol
dm3.mol-1
dm3/mol
A37
Cubic Decimeter Per Mole
Cubic Decimetre Per Mole
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA420
0,001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for time second
dm3.s-1
dm3/s
J93
Cubic Decimeter Per Second
Cubic Decimetre Per Second
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAB084
0.1-fold of the product of the derived SI unit joule and the SI base unit metre
dN.m
DN
Decinewton Meter
Decinewton Metre
0.1
Decisiemens per metre.
ds/m
dS.m-1
dS/m
decisiemens per meter
decisiemens per metre
DeciTonne
1.02
0112/2///62720#UAB078
100-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
dt
DTN
Metric DeciTON
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Macedonian_denar
\(MKD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_denar?oldid=489550202
Denar
Denier or den is a unit of measure for the linear mass density of fibers. It is defined as the mass in grams per 9,000 meters. In the International System of Units the tex is used instead (see below). The denier is based on a natural standard: a single strand of silk is approximately one denier. A 9,000-meter strand of silk weighs about one gram. The term denier is from the French denier, a coin of small value (worth 1/12 of a sou). Applied to yarn, a denier was held to be equal in weight to 1/24 of an ounce. The term microdenier is used to describe filaments that weigh less than one gram per 9,000 meter length.
0.00000011
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Denier
0112/2///62720#UAB244
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denier?oldid=463382291
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Units_of_textile_measurement#Denier
[den]
A49
Denier
Djibouti
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Djiboutian_franc
\(DJF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Djiboutian_franc?oldid=486807423
Djibouti Franc
The currency of São Tomé and Príncipe
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dobra
\(STD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobra?oldid=475725328
Dobra
Dominican Republic
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dominican_peso
\(DOP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_peso?oldid=493950199
Dominican Peso
"Elementary Charge", usually denoted as \(e\), is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the negation (opposite) of the electric charge carried by a single electron. This elementary charge is a fundamental physical constant. To avoid confusion over its sign, e is sometimes called the elementary positive charge. This charge has a measured value of approximately \(1.602176565(35) \times 10 coulombs\). In the cgs system, \(e\) is \(4.80320425(10) \times 10 statcoulombs\).
16.02176565
e
[e]
Elementary Charge
An erg is the unit of energy and mechanical work in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units, symbol 'erg'. Its name is derived from the Greek ergon, meaning 'work'. An erg is the amount of work done by a force of one dyne exerted for a distance of one centimeter. In the CGS base units, it is equal to one gram centimeter-squared per second-squared (\(g \cdot cm^2/s^2\)). It is thus equal to \(10^{-7}\) joules or 100 nanojoules in SI units. \(1 erg = 10^{-7} J = 100 nJ\), \(1 erg = 624.15 GeV = 6.2415 \times 10^{11} eV\), \(1 erg = 1 dyne\cdot cm = 1 g \cdot cm^2/s^2\).
0.0000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Erg
0112/2///62720#UAA429
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erg?oldid=490293432
\(g\cdot cm^{2}/s^{2}\)
erg
erg
A57
Erg
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAB145
CGS unit of the length-related energy
erg.cm-1
erg/cm
A58
Erg Per Centimeter
Erg Per Centimetre
"Erg per Square Centimeter Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(erg/(cm^{2}-s)\).
0.001
\(erg/(cm^{2}-s)\)
0112/2///62720#UAB055
erg.cm-2.s-1
erg/(cm2.s)
A65
Erg per Square Centimeter Second
Erg per Square Centimetre Second
0.1
\(erg-per-cm3\)
0112/2///62720#UAB146
erg.cm-3
erg/cm3
A60
Erg per Cubic Centimeter
Erg per Cubic Centimetre
0.0001
\(erg-per-g\)
0112/2///62720#UAB061
erg.g-1
erg/g
A61
Erg per Gram
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAB061
CGS unit of the mass-related energy
erg.g-1
erg/g
A61
Erg Per Gram
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAB147
CGS unit of the mass-related power
erg.g-1.s-1
erg/(g.s)
A62
Erg Per Gram Second
"Erg per Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Power' expressed as \(erg/s\).
0.0000001
\(erg/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA430
\(g\cdot cm^{2}/s^{3}\)
erg.s-1
erg/s
A63
Erg per Second
0.0000001
erg s
erg.s
Erg Second
The "Erlang" is a dimensionless unit that is used in telephony as a measure of offered load or carried load on service-providing elements such as telephone circuits or telephone switching equipment.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Erlang_(unit)
0112/2///62720#UAB340
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erlang_(unit)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
E
Erlang
An electron volt (eV) is the energy that an electron gains when it travels through a potential of one volt. You can imagine that the electron starts at the negative plate of a parallel plate capacitor and accelerates to the positive plate, which is at one volt higher potential. Numerically \(1 eV\) equals \(1.6x10^{-19} joules\), where \(1 joule\) is \(6.2x10^{18} eV\). For example, it would take \(6.2x10^{20} eV/sec\) to light a 100 watt light bulb.
0.00000000000000000016021765314
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Electron_volt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_volt?oldid=344021738
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/bibliography.html
eV
eV
Electron Volt
0.000000001602176
\(ev/\AA\)
unit electronvolt divided by the unit angstrom
eV.Ao-1
eV/Ao
Electronvolt Per Angstrom
\(\textbf{Electron Volt per Kelvin} is a unit for 'Heat Capacity' expressed as \(ev/K\).
0.00000000000000000016021765314
\(ev/K\)
eV.K-1
eV/K
Electron Volt per Kelvin
0.0000000000000000001602176
0112/2///62720#UAA426
unit electronvolt divided by the SI base unit metre
eV.m-1
eV/m
A54
Electronvolt Per Meter
Electronvolt Per Metre
"Electron Volt per Tesla" is a unit for 'Magnetic Dipole Moment' expressed as \(eV T^{-1}\).
0.00000000000000000016021765314
\(eV T^{-1}\)
eV.T-1
eV/T
Electron Volt per Tesla
"Electron Volt Second" is a unit for 'Angular Momentum' expressed as \(eV s\).
0.00000000000000000016021765314
eV s
eV.s-1
eV/s
Electron Volt Second
<p>The \(\textit{Hartree}\) (symbol: \(E_h\) or \(Ha\)), also known as the \(\text{Hartree\,Energy}\), is the atomic unit of energy. The hartree energy is equal to the absolute value of the electric potential energy of the hydrogen atom in its ground state. The energy of the electron in an H-atom in its ground state is \(-E_H\), where \(E_H= 2 R_\infty \cdot hc_0\). The 2006 CODATA recommended value was \(E_H = 4.35974394(22) \times 10^{-18} J = 27.21138386(68) eV\).</p>
<dt class="size-14">Definition:</dt>
<dd>\(E_H= \frac{e^2}{4\pi \epsilon_0 a_0 }\)<br/>
where, \(e\) is the elementary charge, \(\epsilon_0\) is the electric constant, and \(a_0\) is the Bohr radius.'</dd>
0.00000000000000000435974394
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hartree
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartree?oldid=489318053
E_h
Hartree
Earth mass (\(M_{\oplus}\)) is the unit of mass equal to that of the Earth. In SI Units, \(1 M_{\oplus} = 5.9722 \times 1024 kg\). Earth mass is often used to describe masses of rocky terrestrial planets. The four terrestrial planets of the Solar System, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, have masses of 0.055, 0.815, 1.000, and 0.107 Earth masses respectively.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Earth_mass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_mass?oldid=495457885
One Earth mass can be converted to related units:
81.3 Lunar mass (ML)
0.00315 Jupiter mass (MJ) (Jupiter has 317.83 Earth masses)[1]
0.0105 Saturn mass (Saturn has 95.16 Earth masses)[3]
0.0583 Neptune mass (Neptune has 17.147 Earth masses)[4]
0.000 003 003 Solar mass (\(M_{\odot}\)) (The Sun has 332946 Earth masses)
Earth mass
Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/East_Caribbean_dollar
\(XCD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Caribbean_dollar?oldid=493020176
East Caribbean Dollar
Egypt
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Egyptian_pound
\(EGP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_pound?oldid=494670285
Egyptian Pound
\(\textbf{Elementary Charge}, usually denoted as \(e\), is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the negation (opposite) of the electric charge carried by a single electron. This elementary charge is a fundamental physical constant. To avoid confusion over its sign, e is sometimes called the elementary positive charge. This charge has a measured value of approximately \(1.602176565(35) \times 10\,coulombs\). In the cgs system, \(e\) is \(4.80320425(10) \times 10\, statcoulombs\).
16.02176565
e
[e]
Elementary Charge
Ethiopia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ethiopian_birr
\(ETB\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethiopian_birr?oldid=493373507
Ethiopian Birr
European Union Euro
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Euro
\(EUR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro?oldid=495293446
Euro
Bonds market unit
\(XBA\)
European Composite Unit (EURCO) (Bonds market unit)
Bonds market unit
\(XBB\)
European Monetary Unit (E.M.U.-6) (Bonds market unit)
Bonds market unit
\(XBD\)
European Unit of Account 17 (E.U.A.-17) (Bonds market unit)
Bonds market unit
\(XBC\)
European Unit of Account 9 (E.U.A.-9) (Bonds market unit)
The exabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The prefix exa means 10^18 in the International System of Units (SI), so ExaByte is 10^18 Bytes.
5545177444479562475.3378569716654
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Exabyte
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
EB
EBy
ExaByte
An ExaCoulomb is \(10^{18} C\).
1000000000000000000.0
EC
EC
ExaCoulomb
1000000000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB122
1 000 000 000 000 000 000-fold of the derived SI unit joule
EJ
A68
Exajoule
The exbibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The prefix exbi means 1024^6
6393154322601327829.8943153498712
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Exbibyte
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
EiB
ExbiByte
"Faraday" is a unit for 'Electric Charge' expressed as \(F\).
96485.3399
F
Faraday
"Fractional area" is a unit for 'Solid Angle' expressed as \(fa\).
12.5663706
fa
Fractional area
The SI unit of electric capacitance. Very early in the study of electricity scientists discovered that a pair of conductors separated by an insulator can store a much larger charge than an isolated conductor can store. The better the insulator, the larger the charge that the conductors can hold. This property of a circuit is called capacitance, and it is measured in farads. One farad is defined as the ability to store one coulomb of charge per volt of potential difference between the two conductors. This is a natural definition, but the unit it defines is very large. In practical circuits, capacitance is often measured in microfarads, nanofarads, or sometimes even in picofarads (10-12 farad, or trillionths of a farad). The unit is named for the British physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867), who was known for his work in electricity and electrochemistry.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Farad
0112/2///62720#UAA144
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farad?oldid=493070876
C/V
F
F
FAR
Farad
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA145
SI derived unit farad divided by the 1 000-fold of the SI base unit metre
F.km-1
F/km
H33
Farad Per Kilometer
Farad Per Kilometre
Farad Per Meter (\(F/m\)) is a unit in the category of Electric permittivity. It is also known as farad/meter. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Farad Per Meter has a dimension of M-1L-3T4I2 where M is mass, L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(F/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA146
F.m-1
F/m
A69
Farad per Meter
Farad per Metre
An abfarad is an obsolete electromagnetic (CGS) unit of capacitance equal to \(10^{9}\) farads (1,000,000,000 F or 1 GF). The absolute farad of the e.m.u. system, for a steady current identically \(abC/abV\), and identically reciprocal abdaraf. 1 abF = 1 GF.
1000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abfarad
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abfarad?oldid=407124018
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-13
abF
GF
Abfarad
The absolute dielectric constant of free space is defined as the ratio of displacement to the electric field intensity. The unit of measure is the abfarad per centimeter, a derived CGS unit.
100000000000.0
\(abf-per-cm\)
GF.cm-1
Abfarad per Centimeter
Abfarad per Centimetre
Statfarad (statF) is a unit in the category of Electric capacitance. It is also known as statfarads. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system. Statfarad (statF) has a dimension of \(M^{-1}L^{-2}T^4I^2\) where M is mass, L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit F by multiplying its value by a factor of 1.11265E-012.
0.000000000001112650056053618432174089964848
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_capacitance--statfarad.cfm
statF
Statfarad
A fathom = 1.8288 meters, is a unit of length in the imperial and the U.S. customary systems, used especially for measuring the depth of water. There are two yards in an imperial or U.S. fathom. Originally based on the distance between the man's outstretched arms, the size of a fathom has varied slightly depending on whether it was defined as a thousandth of an (Admiralty) nautical mile or as a multiple of the imperial yard. Abbreviations: f, fath, fm, fth, fthm.
1.8288
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fathom
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fathom?oldid=493265429
fath
[fth_i]
Fathom
The board-foot is a specialized unit of measure for the volume of lumber in the United States and Canada. It is the volume of a one-foot length of a board one foot wide and one inch thick. Board-foot can be abbreviated FBM (for 'foot, board measure'), BDFT, or BF. Thousand board-feet can be abbreviated as MFBM, MBFT or MBF.
0.00236
Bf
[bf_i]
Board Foot
"Foot Candle" is a unit for 'Luminous Flux Per Area' expressed as \(fc\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Foot-candle
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot-candle?oldid=475579268
fc
Foot Candle
The \(\textit{fermi}\), or \(\textit{femtometer}\) (other spelling \(femtometre\), symbol \(fm\)) is an SI unit of length equal to \(10^{-15} metre\). This distance is often encountered in nuclear physics as a characteristic of this scale. The symbol for the fermi is also \(fm\).
0.0
0.000000000000001
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_(unit)
fm
fermi
"Franklin" is a unit for 'Electric Charge' expressed as \(Fr\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Franklin
0112/2///62720#UAB212
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin?oldid=495090654
Fr
Franklin
"Frame per Second" is a unit for 'Video Frame Rate' expressed as \(fps\).
fps
/s{frame}
s-1{frame}
Frame per Second
A foot is a unit of length defined as being 0.3048 m exactly and used in the imperial system of units and United States customary units. It is subdivided into 12 inches. The foot is still officially used in Canada and still commonly used in the United Kingdom, although the latter has partially metricated its units of measurement.
0.3048
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Foot_%28length%29
0112/2///62720#UAA440
ft
[ft_i]
FOT
Foot
"Foot Lambert" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Luminance' expressed as \(ft-L\).
3.4262591
\(ft-L\)
[ft_i].Lmb
Foot Lambert
"Foot Pound Force" is an Imperial unit for 'Energy And Work' expressed as \(ft-lbf\).
1.35581807
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Foot-pound_force
\(ft-lbf\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot-pound_force?oldid=453269257
[ft_i].[lbf_av]
Foot Pound Force
"Foot Pound per Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Energy Per Area' expressed as \(ft-lbf/ft^{2}\).
14.5939042
\(ft-lbf/ft^{2}\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].[sft_i]-1
Foot Pound per Square Foot
"Foot Pound Force per Square Foot Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(ft \cdot lbf/(ft^2 \cdot s)\).
14.5939042
\(ft-lbf/ft^2s\)
\(ft \cdot lbf/(ft^2 \cdot s)\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].[sft_i]-1.s-1
Foot Pound Force per Square Foot Second
"Foot Pound Force per Hour" is an Imperial unit for 'Power' expressed as \(ft-lbf/hr\).
0.00376616129
\(ft-lbf/hr\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].h-1
Foot Pound Force per Hour
"Foot Pound Force per Square Meter" is a unit for 'Energy Per Area' expressed as \(ft-lbf/m^{2}\).
\(ft-lbf/m^{2}\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].m-2
Foot Pound Force per Square Meter
Foot Pound Force per Square Metre
"Foot Pound Force per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Power' expressed as \(ft-lbf/min\).
0.0225969678
\(ft-lbf/min\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].min-1
Foot Pound Force per Minute
"Foot Pound Force per Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Power' expressed as \(ft-lbf/s\).
1.35581807
\(ft-lbf/s\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].s-1
Foot Pound Force per Second
"Foot Pound Force Second" is a unit for 'Angular Momentum' expressed as \(lbf / s\).
\(lbf / s\)
[ft_i].[lbf_av].s
Foot Pound Force Second
"Foot Poundal" is an Imperial unit for 'Energy And Work' expressed as \(ft-pdl\).
0.0421401100938048
0112/2///62720#UAB220
ft-pdl
Foot Poundal
0.54864
0112/2///62720#UAA441
unit foot as a linear measure according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for temperature degree Fahrenheit
[ft_i].[lbf_av].[degF]
K13
Foot Per Degree Fahrenheit
"Foot per Hour" is an Imperial unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as \(ft/hr\).
0.00008466666666666667
\(ft/hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAA442
[ft_i].h-1
[ft_i]/h
K14
Foot per Hour
"Foot per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as \(ft/min\).
0.00508
\(ft/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAA448
[ft_i].min-1
[ft_i]/min
FR
Foot per Minute
\(\textit{foot per second}\) (plural \(\textit{feet per second}\)) is a unit of both speed (scalar) and velocity (vector quantity, which includes direction). It expresses the distance in feet (\(ft\)) traveled or displaced, divided by the time in seconds (\(s\), or \(sec\)). The corresponding unit in the International System of Units (SI) is the \(\textit{metre per second}\). Abbreviations include \(ft/s\), \(ft/sec\) and \(fps\), and the rarely used scientific notation \(ft\,s\).
0.3048
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Foot_per_second
\(ft/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA449
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot_per_second?oldid=491316573
[ft_i].s-1
[ft_i]/s
FS
Foot per Second
\(\textit{Foot per Square Second}\) is an Imperial unit for \(\textit{Linear Acceleration}\) expressed as \(ft/s^2\).
0.3048
\(ft/s^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA452
[ft_i].s-2
[ft_i]/s2
A73
Foot per Square Second
The square foot (plural square feet; abbreviated \(ft^2\) or \(sq \, ft\)) is an imperial unit and U.S. customary unit of area, used mainly in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Hong Kong, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. It is defined as the area of a square with sides of 1 foot in length.
0.09290304
\(ft^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA454
[ft_i]2
[sft_i]
FTK
Square Foot
\(\textbf{Square Foot Degree Fahrenheit} is an Imperial unit for 'Area Temperature' expressed as \(ft^{2}-degF\).
\(ft^{2}-degF\)
[sft_i].[degF]
Square Foot Degree Fahrenheit
\(\textbf{Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit} is an Imperial unit for 'Area Time Temperature' expressed as \(ft^{2}-hr-degF\).
\(ft^{2}-hr-degF\)
[sft_i].h.[degF]
Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit
\(\textbf{Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit per BTU} is an Imperial unit for 'Thermal Insulance' expressed as \((degF-hr-ft^{2})/Btu\).
\(sqft-hr-degF/btu\)
[sft_i].h.[degF].[Btu_IT]-1
Square Foot Hour Degree Fahrenheit per BTU
0.00346673589
\(ft2-per-btu-in\)
[sft_i].[Btu_IT]-1.[in_i]-1
Square Foot per BTU Inch
\(\textbf{Square Foot per Hour} is an Imperial unit for \(\textit{Kinematic Viscosity}\) and \(\textit{Thermal Diffusivity}\) expressed as \(ft^{2}/hr\).
0.0000258064
\(ft^{2}/hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAB247
[sft_i].h-1
Square Foot per Hour
"Square Foot per Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Kinematic Viscosity' expressed as \(ft^{2}/s\).
0.09290304
\(ft^{2}/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA455
[sft_i].s-1
S3
Square Foot per Second
\(\textbf{Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit} is an Imperial unit for 'Area Time Temperature' expressed as \(ft^{2}\cdot s\cdot degF\).
\(ft^{2}-s-degF\)
[sft_i].s.[degF]
Square Foot Second Degree Fahrenheit
The cubic foot is an Imperial and US customary unit of volume, used in the United States and the United Kingdom. It is defined as the volume of a cube with sides of one foot (0.3048 m) in length. To calculate cubic feet multiply length X width X height.
0.028316846592
\(ft^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA456
[cft_i]
[ft_i]3
FTQ
Cubic Foot
0.0000003277413
0112/2///62720#UAA458
power of the unit foot according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for time day
[cft_i].d-1
K22
Cubic Foot Per Day
0.05097033
0112/2///62720#UAA457
power of the unit foot as a linear measure according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for temperature degree Fahrenheit
[cft_i].[degF]-1
K21
Cubic Foot Per Degree Fahrenheit
0.000007865792
0112/2///62720#UAA459
power of the unit foot according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit hour
[cft_i].h-1
2K
Cubic Foot Per Hour
"Cubic Foot per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Volume Per Unit Time' expressed as \(ft^3/min\).
0.0004719474432000001
\(ft^{3}/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAA461
[cft_i].min-1
[cft_i]/min
[ft_i]3.min-1
[ft_i]3/min
2L
Cubic Foot per Minute
0.00508
0112/2///62720#UAB086
unit of the volume flow rate according to the Anglio-American and imperial system of units cubic foot per minute related to the transfer area according to the Anglian American and Imperial system of units square foot
[cft_i].min-1.[sft_i]-1
36
Cubic Foot Per Minute Square Foot
"Cubic Foot per Second" is an Imperial unit for \( \textit{Volume Per Unit Time}\) expressed as \(ft^3/s\).
0.028316846592000004
\(ft^{3}/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA462
[cft_i].s-1
[cft_i]/s
[ft_i]3.s-1
[ft_i]3/s
E17
Cubic Foot per Second
"Foot of Water" is a unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(ftH2O\).
0112/2///62720#UAA463
ftH2O
[ft_i'H2O]
K24
Foot of Water
40636.66
0112/2///62720#UAA464
not SI conform unit of the pressure, at which 1 ftHg corresponds to the static pressure, which is excited by a mercury column with a height of 1 foot
[ft_i'Hg]
K25
Foot Of Mercury
\(\textit{US Survey Foot}\) is a unit for 'Length' expressed as \(ftUS\).
0.3048006
ft_us
[ft_us]
US Survey Foot
A furlong is a measure of distance in imperial units and U.S. customary units equal to one-eighth of a mile, equivalent to 220 yards, 660 feet, 40 rods, or 10 chains. The exact value of the furlong varies slightly among English-speaking countries. Five furlongs are approximately 1 kilometre (1.0058 km is a closer approximation). Since the original definition of the metre was one-quarter of one ten-millionth of the circumference of the Earth (along the great circle coincident with the meridian of longitude passing through Paris), the circumference of the Earth is about 40,000 km or about 200,000 furlongs.
201.168
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Furlong
0112/2///62720#UAB204
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furlong?oldid=492237369
fur
[fur_us]
Check if this is US-Survey or International Customary definition (multiplier)
Furlong
\(longfur\)
Long Furlong
Falkland Islands
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Falkland_Islands_pound
\(FKP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falkland_Islands_pound?oldid=489513616
Falkland Islands Pound
A FemtoCoulomb is \(10^{-15} C\).
0.000000000000001
fC
fC
FemtoCoulomb
One part per 10**18 by mass of the measurand in the matrix.
0.18
fg.kg-1
Femtograms per kilogram
One 10**18 part of the SI standard unit of mass of the measurand per litre volume of matrix..
0.15
fg.L-1
Femtograms per litre
0.000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAB124
0,000 000 000 000 001-fold of the derived SI unit joule
fJ
A70
Femtojoule
The \(\textit{femtometre}\) is an SI unit of length equal to \(10^{-15} meter\). This distance can also be called \(\textit{fermi}\) and was so named in honour of Enrico Fermi. It is often encountered in nuclear physics as a characteristic of this scale. The symbol for the fermi is also \(fm\).
0.000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAB063
fm
fm
A71
Femtometer
Femtometre
A 10**18 part quantity of substance of the measurand per kilogram mass of matrix.
0.15
fmol.kg-1
Femtomoles per kilogram
A 10**18 part quantity of substance of the measurand per litre volume of matrix.
0.000000000001
fmol.L-1
Femtomoles per litre
Fiji
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fijian_dollar
\(FJD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fijian_dollar?oldid=494373740
Fiji Dollar
flight
Flight
Hungary
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hungarian_forint
\(HUF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_forint?oldid=492818607
Forint
Democratic Republic of Congo
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Congolese_franc
\(CDF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congolese_franc?oldid=490314640
Franc Congolais
"Gravity" is a unit for 'Linear Acceleration' expressed as \(G\).
9.80665
G
[g]
Gravity
The \(\textit{Galileo}\) is the unit of acceleration of free fall used extensively in the science of gravimetry. The Galileo is defined as \(1 \textit{centimeter per square second}\) (\(1 cm/s^2\)). Unfortunately, the Galileo is often denoted with the symbol Gal, not to be confused with the Gallon that also uses the same symbol.
0.01
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gal
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gal?oldid=482010741
CGS unit of acceleration called gal with the definition: 1 Gal = 1 cm/s
Gal
Gal
Galileo
"Imperial Gallon" is an Imperial unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(galIMP\).
0.00454609
gal
[gal_br]
Imperial Gallon
0.00454609
0112/2///62720#UAA500
unit of the volume for fluids according to the Imperial system of units
[gal_br]
GLI
Gallon (UK)
0.00000005261678
0112/2///62720#UAA501
unit gallon (UK dry or liq.) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI unit day
[gal_br].d-1
K26
Gallon (UK) Per Day
0.000001262803
0112/2///62720#UAA502
unit gallon (UK dry or Liq.) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI unit hour
[gal_br].h-1
K27
Gallon (UK) Per Hour
0.00007576817
0112/2///62720#UAA503
unit gallon (UK dry or liq.) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI unit minute
[gal_br].m-1in
G3
Gallon UK) Per Minute
0.00454609
0112/2///62720#UAA504
unit gallon (UK dry or liq.) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[gal_br].s-1
K28
Gallon (UK) Per Second
"US Gallon" is a unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(galUS\).
0.003785412
gal
[gal_us]
US Gallon
Queen Anne's wine gallon
"US Gallon per Day" is a unit for 'Volume Per Unit Time' expressed as \(gal/d\).
0.0000000438126389
\(gal/d\)
[gal_us].d-1
[gal_us]/d
US Gallon per Day
0.000001051503
0112/2///62720#UAA507
unit gallon (US, liq.) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI unit hour
[gal_us].h-1
G50
Gallon (US) Per Hour
"US Gallon per Minute" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Volume Per Unit Time' expressed as \(gal/min\).
0.0000630902
\(gal/min\)
[gal_us].min-1
[gal_us]/min
US Gallon per Minute
0.003785412
0112/2///62720#UAA509
unit gallon (US, liq.) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[gal_us].s-1
K30
Gallon (US Liquid) Per Second
"Dry Gallon US" is a unit for 'Dry Volume' expressed as \(dry_gal\).
0.00440488377
dry_gal
[gal_wi]
Dry Gallon US
Winchester gallon
corn gallon
0.0003333333
0112/2///62720#UAB377
unit for the diameter of thin tubes in the medical technology (e.g. catheter) and telecommunications engineering (e.g. fiberglasses).
[Ch]
H79
French Gauge
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAB135
CGS unit of the magnetic flux density B
G
76
Gauss
The fundamental unit of magnetomotive force (\(mmf\)) in electromagnetic units is called a Gilbert. It is the \(mmf\) which will produce a magnetic field strength of one Gauss (Maxwell per Square Centimeter) in a path one centimeter long.
0.795774715
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gilbert
0112/2///62720#UAB211
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert?oldid=492755037
Gb
Gb
Gilbert
0.0001420653
0112/2///62720#UAA511
unit of the volume for fluids according to the Imperial system of units (1/32 Imperial Gallon)
[gil_br]
GII
Gill (UK)
0.000000001644274
0112/2///62720#UAA512
unit of the volume gill (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[gil_br].d-1
K32
Gill (UK) Per Day
0.00000003946258
0112/2///62720#UAA513
unit of the volume gill (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[gil_br].h-1
K33
Gill (UK) Per Hour
0.000002367755
0112/2///62720#UAA514
unit of the volume gill (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[gil_br].min-1
K34
Gill (UK) Per Minute
0.0001420653
0112/2///62720#UAA515
unit of the volume gill (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[gil_br].s-1
K35
Gill (UK) Per Second
0.000118294125
0112/2///62720#UAA516
unit of the volume according the Anglo-American system of units (1/32 US Gallon)
[gil_us]
GIA
Gill (US)
0.000000001369145
0112/2///62720#UAA517
unit of the volume gill (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time day
[gil_us].d-1
K36
Gill (US) Per Day
0.00000003285947
0112/2///62720#UAA518
unit of the volume gill (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[gil_us].h-1
K37
Gill (US) Per Hour
0.000001971568
0112/2///62720#UAA519
unit of the volume gill (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[gil_us].min-1
K38
Gill (US) Per Minute
0.0001182941
0112/2///62720#UAA520
unit of the volume gill (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[gil_us].s-1
K39
Gill (US) Per Second
A unit of mass in the metric system. The name comes from the Greek gramma, a small weight identified in later Roman and Byzantine times with the Latin scripulum or scruple (the English scruple is equal to about 1.3 grams). The gram was originally defined to be the mass of one cubic centimeter of pure water, but to provide precise standards it was necessary to construct physical objects of specified mass. One gram is now defined to be 1/1000 of the mass of the standard kilogram, a platinum-iridium bar carefully guarded by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Paris for more than a century. (The kilogram, rather than the gram, is considered the base unit of mass in the SI.) The gram is a small mass, equal to about 15.432 grains or 0.035 273 966 ounce.
0.001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gram
0112/2///62720#UAA465
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gram?oldid=493995797
g
g
GRM
Gram
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAB381
unit of the imbalance as product of the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram and the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
g.mm
H84
Gram Millimeter
Gram Millimetre
10.0
0112/2///62720#UAB103
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre and exponent 2
g.cm-2
g/cm2
25
Gram Per Square Centimeter
Gram Per Square Centimetre
A rate of change of 0.001 of the SI unit of mass over 0.00001 of the SI unit of area in a period of an average calendar year (365.25 days)
0.000000316880878140289
g.cm-2.a-1
Grams per square centimetre per year
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA469
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
g.cm-3
g/cm3
23
Gram Per Cubic Centimeter
Gram Per Cubic Centimetre
0.00000001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA472
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit day
g.d-1
F26
Gram Per Day
\(\textbf{Gram Degree Celsius} is a C.G.S System unit for 'Mass Temperature' expressed as \(g \cdot degC\).
\(g-degC\)
d.Cel-1
Gram Degree Celsius
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA475
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
g.dm-3
F23
Gram Per Cubic Decimeter
Gram Per Cubic Decimetre
1.0
mass ratio consisting of the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram.
g.g-1
g/g
Gram Per Gram
0.0000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA478
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit hour
g.h-1
F27
Gram Per Hour
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA481
0,001 fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit kilogram
g.kg-1
g/kg
GK
Gram Per Kilogram
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA482
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit litre
g.L-1
GL
Gram Per Liter
Gram Per Litre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA485
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit metre
g.m-1
GF
Gram Per Meter
Gram Per Metre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA486
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
g.m-2
g/m2
GM
Gram Per Square Meter
Gram Per Square Metre
0.000000011574073
\(g-m^{-2}-day^{-1}\)
A metric unit of volume over time indicating the amount generated across one square meter over a day.
g.m-2.d-1
grams per square meter per day
grams per square metre per day
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA487
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
g.m-3
g/m3
A93
Gram Per Cubic Meter
Gram Per Cubic Metre
0.00001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA490
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit minute
g.min-1
F28
Gram Per Minute
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA496
0,01-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit mol
g.mol-1
A94
Gram Per Mole
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA493
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the unit litre
g.mL-1
GJ
Gram Per Millilitre
Gram Per Millilitre
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB376
0,001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold the SI base unit meter
g.mm-1
H76
Gram Per Millimeter
Gram Per Millimetre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA497
0,001fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit second
g.s-1
F29
Gram Per Second
0.000000011574073
\(g C-m^{-2}-day^{-1}\).
A metric unit of volume over time indicating the amount generated across one square meter over a day. Used to express productivity of an ecosystem.
g.m-2.d-1{C}
grams Carbon per square meter per day
grams Carbon per square metre per day
98.0665
0112/2///62720#UAA510
not SI conform unit of the pressure
gf.cm-2
K31
Gram Force Per Square Centimeter
Gram Force Per Square Centimetre
0.000000011574073
\(g N-m^{-2}-day^{-1}\).
A metric unit of volume over time indicating the amount of Nitrogen generated across one square meter over a day. Used to express productivity of an ecosystem.
g.m-2.d-1{N}
grams Nitrogen per square meter per day
grams Nitrogen per square metre per day
"Gon" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Plane Angle' expressed as \(gon\).
0.015707963267949
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gon
0112/2///62720#UAA522
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gon?oldid=424098171
gon
gon
A91
Gon
the tangent of an angle of inclination multiplied by 100
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grade
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grade?oldid=485504533
gr
Grade
"Grad" is a unit for 'Plane Angle' expressed as \(grad\).
0.0157079633
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grad
0112/2///62720#UAA522
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grad?oldid=490906645
grad
A91
Grad
A grain is a unit of measurement of mass that is nominally based upon the mass of a single seed of a cereal. The grain is the only unit of mass measure common to the three traditional English mass and weight systems; the obsolete Tower grain was, by definition, exactly /64 of a troy grain. Since 1958, the grain or troy grain measure has been defined in terms of units of mass in the International System of Units as precisely 64.79891 milligrams. Thus, \(1 gram \approx 15.4323584 grains\). There are precisely 7,000 grains per avoirdupois pound in the imperial and U.S. customary units, and 5,760 grains in the Troy pound.
0.00006479891
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cereal
0112/2///62720#UAA523
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cereal?oldid=495222949
gr
[gr]
GRN
Grain
"Grain per Gallon" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(gr/gal\).
0.017118061
\(gr/gal\)
[gr].[gal_br]-1
Grain per Gallon
0.01711806
0112/2///62720#UAA524
unit of the density according to the Anglo-American system of units
[gr].[gal_us]-1
K41
Grain Per Gallon (US)
The SI unit of radiation dose. Radiation carries energy, and when it is absorbed by matter the matter receives this energy. The dose is the amount of energy deposited per unit of mass. One gray is defined to be the dose of one joule of energy absorbed per kilogram of matter, or 100 rad. The unit is named for the British physician L. Harold Gray (1905-1965), an authority on the use of radiation in the treatment of cancer.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grey
0112/2///62720#UAA163
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey?oldid=494774160
J/kg
Gy
Gy
A95
Gray
"Gray per Second" is a unit for 'Absorbed Dose Rate' expressed as \(Gy/s\).
1.0
\(Gy/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA164
Gy.s-1
A96
Gray per Second
The formula for calculating GT is given by \({ GT=V\times (0.2+0.02\times \log _{10}(V))}\)
0.0
http://www.imo.org/en/About/Conventions/ListOfConventions/Pages/International-Convention-on-Tonnage-Measurement-of-Ships.aspx
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_tonnage
\({ GT=V\times (0.2+0.02\times \log _{10}(V))}\) where V is measured in cubic meters.
Gross tonnage (GT, G.T. or gt) is a nonlinear measure of a ship's overall internal volume. Gross tonnage is different from gross register tonnage. Gross tonnage is used to determine things such as a ship's manning regulations, safety rules, registration fees, and port dues, whereas the older gross register tonnage is a measure of the volume of only certain enclosed spaces.
t{gross}
Gross Tonnage
"Gamma" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Magnetic Field'.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gamma
0112/2///62720#UAB213
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma?oldid=494680973
γ
Gamma
The gibibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information storage. The prefix gibi means 1024^3
5954088943.6391441429912255610071
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gibibyte
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
GiB
GibiByte
Gibraltar
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gibraltar_pound
\(GIP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibraltar_pound?oldid=494842600
Gibraltar pound
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB047
1 000 000 000-fold of the derived SI unit becquerel
GBq
GBQ
Gigabecquerel
The gigabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information storage. The prefix giga means 10 in the International System of Units (SI), therefore 1 gigabyte is \(1,000,000,000 \; bytes\). The unit symbol for the gigabyte is \(GB\) or \(Gbyte\), but not \(Gb\) (lower case b) which is typically used for the gigabit. Historically, the term has also been used in some fields of computer science and information technology to denote the \(gibibyte\), or \(1073741824 \; bytes\).
5954088943.6391441429912255610071
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gigabyte
0112/2///62720#UAB185
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigabyte?oldid=493019145
GB
GBy
E34
GigaByte
gbyte
1.09
GC
GC
GigaCoulomb
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA149
1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
GC.m-3
A84
Gigacoulomb Per Cubic Meter
Gigacoulomb Per Cubic Metre
"Giga Electron Volt" is a unit for 'Energy And Work' expressed as \(GeV\).
0.00000000016021765314
GeV
GeV
Giga Electron Volt
The hertz (symbol Hz) is the SI unit of frequency defined as the number of cycles per second of a periodic phenomenon. A GigaHertz is \(10^{9} hz\).
1000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hertz
0112/2///62720#UAA150
GHz
GHz
A86
Gigahertz
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA151
product of the 1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit hertz and the SI base unit metre
GHz.m
M18
Gigahertz Meter
Gigahertz Metre
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA152
1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule
GJ
GV
Gigajoule
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA147
1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
GOhm
A87
Gigaohm
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA153
1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal
GP
A89
Gigapascal
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA154
1 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit watt
GW
A90
Gigawatt
3600000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA155
1 000 000 000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit watt and the unit hour
GW.h
GWH
Gigawatt Hour
\(XAU\)
[oz_tr]{Au}
Gold (one Troy ounce)
Bank for International Settlements
\(XFO\)
Gold franc (special settlement currency)
The gauss, abbreviated as \(G\), is the cgs unit of measurement of a magnetic field \(B\), which is also known as the "magnetic flux density" or the "magnetic induction". One gauss is defined as one maxwell per square centimeter; it equals \(10^{-4} tesla\) (or \(100 micro T\)). The Gauss is identical to maxwells per square centimetre; technically defined in a three-dimensional system, it corresponds in the SI, with its extra base unit the ampere. The gauss is quite small by earthly standards, 1 Gs being only about four times Earth's flux density, but it is subdivided, with \(1 gauss = 105 gamma\). This unit of magnetic induction is also known as the \(\textit{abtesla}\).
0.0001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gauss_%28unit%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss_(unit)
http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/source/g/a/gauss/source.html
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-526?rskey=HAbfz2
Gs
G
Gs
Paraguay
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Guaran%C3%AD
\(PYG\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guaraní?oldid=412592698
Guarani
Guinea
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Guinean_franc
\(GNF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinean_franc?oldid=489527042
Guinea Franc
Guyana
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Guyanese_dollar
\(GYD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyanese_dollar?oldid=495070062
Guyana Dollar
The SI unit of electric inductance. A changing magnetic field induces an electric current in a loop of wire (or in a coil of many loops) located in the field. Although the induced voltage depends only on the rate at which the magnetic flux changes, measured in webers per second, the amount of the current depends also on the physical properties of the coil. A coil with an inductance of one henry requires a flux of one weber for each ampere of induced current. If, on the other hand, it is the current which changes, then the induced field will generate a potential difference within the coil: if the inductance is one henry a current change of one ampere per second generates a potential difference of one volt. The henry is a large unit; inductances in practical circuits are measured in millihenrys (mH) or microhenrys (u03bc H). The unit is named for the American physicist Joseph Henry (1797-1878), one of several scientists who discovered independently how magnetic fields can be used to generate alternating currents. \(\text{H} \; \equiv \; \text{henry}\; \equiv\; \frac{\text{Wb}}{\text{A}}\; \equiv\; \frac{\text{weber}}{\text{amp}}\; \equiv\ \frac{\text{V}\cdot\text{s}}{\text{A}}\; \equiv\; \frac{\text{volt} \cdot \text{second}}{\text{amp}}\; \equiv\ \Omega\cdot\text{s}\; \equiv\; \text{ohm.second}\)
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Henry
0112/2///62720#UAA165
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry?oldid=491435978
Wb/A
H
H
81
Henry
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA167
SI derived unit henry divided by the 1 000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
H.kOhm-1
H03
Henry Per Kiloohm
The henry per meter (symbolized \(H/m\)) is the unit of magnetic permeability in the International System of Units ( SI ). Reduced to base units in SI, \(1\,H/m\) is the equivalent of one kilogram meter per square second per square ampere.
1.0
\(H/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA168
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry?oldid=491435978
H.m-1
A98
Henry per Meter
Henry per Metre
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA166
SI derived unit henry divided by the SI derived unit ohm
H.Ohm-1
H04
Henry Per Ohm
The customary metric unit of land area, equal to 100 ares. One hectare is a square hectometer, that is, the area of a square 100 meters on each side: exactly 10 000 square meters or approximately 107 639.1 square feet, 11 959.9 square yards, or 2.471 054 acres.
10000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hectare
0112/2///62720#UAA532
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hectare?oldid=494256954
ha
har
HAR
Hectare
The "Hartley" is a unit of information.
2.3025850929940456840179914546844
0112/2///62720#UAB344
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_(information)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
Hartley
The "Hartley per Second" is a unit of information rate.
1.0
\(Hart/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAB347
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_(information)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
Hartley per Second
550 foot-pound force per second
745.6999
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Horsepower
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horsepower?oldid=495510329
HP
[HP]
Horsepower
"Horsepower Metric" is a unit for 'Power' expressed as \(hp/m\).
\(hp/m\)
[HP].m-1
Horsepower Metric
"Horsepower Electric" is a unit for 'Power' expressed as \(hp/V\).
\(hp/V\)
[HP].V-1
Horsepower Electric
"Boiler Horsepower" is a unit for 'Power' expressed as \(hp_boiler\).
9809.5
\(boiler_hp\)
Boiler Horsepower
9809.5
0112/2///62720#UAA536
unit of the power according to the Imperial system of units
K42
Horsepower (brake)
746.0
0112/2///62720#UAA537
unit of the power according to the Anglo-American system of units
K43
Horsepower (electric)
735.4988
0112/2///62720#UAA534
unit of the mechanical power according to the Anglo-American system of units
HJ
Horsepower (metric)
The hour (common symbol: h or hr) is a unit of measurement of time. In modern usage, an hour comprises 60 minutes, or 3,600 seconds. It is approximately 1/24 of a mean solar day. An hour in the Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) time standard can include a negative or positive leap second, and may therefore have a duration of 3,599 or 3,601 seconds for adjustment purposes. Although it is not a standard defined by the International System of Units, the hour is a unit accepted for use with SI, represented by the symbol h.
3600.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hour
0112/2///62720#UAA525
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hour?oldid=495040268
h
h
K42
Hour
"Hour Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Area Time' expressed as \(hr-ft^{2}\).
334.450944
\(hr-ft^{2}\)
h.[ft_i]2
h.[sft_i]
Hour Square Foot
Sidereal time is a time-keeping system astronomers use to keep track of the direction to point their telescopes to view a given star in the night sky. A mean sidereal day is about 23 h 56 m 4.1 s in length. However, due to variations in the rotation rate of the Earth, the rate of an ideal sidereal clock deviates from any simple multiple of a civil clock. In practice, the difference is kept track of by the difference UTC-UT1, which is measured by radio telescopes and kept on file and available to the public at the IERS and at the United States Naval Observatory. A Sidereal Hour is \(1/24^{th}\) of a Sidereal Day. A mean sidereal day is 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4.0916 seconds (23.9344699 hours or 0.99726958 mean solar days), the time it takes Earth to make one rotation relative to the vernal equinox. (Due to nutation, an actual sidereal day is not quite so constant.) The vernal equinox itself precesses slowly westward relative to the fixed stars, completing one revolution in about 26,000 years, so the misnamed sidereal day ("sidereal" is derived from the Latin sidus meaning "star") is 0.0084 seconds shorter than Earth's period of rotation relative to the fixed stars.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_time
hr
h
Sidereal Hour
The hertz (symbol Hz) is the SI unit of frequency defined as the number of cycles per second of a periodic phenomenon. One of its most common uses is the description of the sine wave, particularly those used in radio and audio applications, such as the frequency of musical tones. The word "hertz" is named for Heinrich Rudolf Hertz, who was the first to conclusively prove the existence of electromagnetic waves.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hertz
0112/2///62720#UAA170
Hz
Hz
HTZ
Hertz
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA171
product of the SI derived unit hertz and the SI base unit metre
Hz.m
H34
Hertz Meter
Hertz Metre
\(\textbf{Hertz per Kelvin} is a unit for 'Inverse Time Temperature' expressed as \(Hz K^{-1}\).
1.0
\(Hz K^{-1}\)
Hz.K-1
Hertz per Kelvin
"Hertz per Tesla" is a unit for 'Electric Charge Per Mass' expressed as \(Hz T^{-1}\).
1.0
\(Hz T^{-1}\)
Hz.T-1
Hertz per Tesla
In the Hertz per Volt standard the frequency of the note is directly related to the voltage. A pitch of a note goes up one octave when its frequency doubles, meaning that the voltage will have to double for every octave rise. Depending on the footage (octave) selected, nominally one volt gives 1000Hz, two volts 2000Hz and so on. In terms of notes, bottom C would be 0.25 volts, the next C up would be 0.5 volts, then 1V, 2V, 4V, 8V for the following octaves. This system was used mainly by Yamaha and Korg.
1.0
\(Hz V^{-1}\)
Hz.V-1
Hertz per Volt
Abhenry is the centimeter-gram-second electromagnetic unit of inductance, equal to one billionth of a henry.
0.000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abhenry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abhenry?oldid=477198643
abH
nH
Abhenry
"Stathenry" (statH) is a unit in the category of Electric inductance. It is also known as stathenries. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system. Stathenry (statH) has a dimension of \(ML^2T^{-2}I^{-2}\) where M is mass, L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit H by multiplying its value by a factor of \(8.987552 \times 10^{11}\) .
898760000000.0
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_inductance--stathenry.cfm
statH
Stathenry
The Stathenry per Centimeter is a unit of measure for the absolute permeability of free space.
89876000000000.0
\(stath-per-cm\)
Stathenry per Centimeter
Stathenry per Centimetre
Haiti
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Haitian_gourde
\(HTG\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_gourde?oldid=486090975
Haiti Gourde
Heart Beat
10000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB087
100-fold of the unit bar
hbar
HBA
Hectobar
"HectoCoulomb" is a unit for 'Electric Charge' expressed as \(hC\).
100.0
hC
hC
HectoCoulomb
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAB079
0.1-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
hg
HGM
Hectogram
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAA533
100-fold of the unit litre
hL
HLT
Hectolitre
Hectolitre
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAB062
100-fold of the SI base unit metre
hm
HMT
Hectometer
Hectometre
Hectopascal is a unit of pressure. 1 Pa is approximately the pressure exerted by a 10-g mass resting on a 1-cm2 area. 1013 hPa = 1 atm. There are 100 pascals in 1 hectopascal.
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA527
hPa
hPa
A97
Hectopascal is commonly used in meteorology to report values for atmospheric pressure. It is equivalent to millibar.
Hectopascal
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAA530
product out of the 100-fold of the SI derived unit pascal and the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
hPa.L.s-1
F93
Hectopascal Liter Per Second
Hectopascal Litre Per Second
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA531
product out of the 100-fold of the SI unit pascal and the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
hPa.m3.s-1
F94
Hectopascal Cubic Meter Per Second
Hectopascal Cubic Metre Per Second
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA529
100-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the unit bar
hPa.bar-1
E99
Hectopascal Per Bar
A change in pressure of one hundred Newtons per square metre (100 Pascals) per hour. Equivalent to a change of one millibar per hour.
0.0277777777777778
hPa.h-1
Hectopascals per hour
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA528
100-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the SI base unit kelvin
hPa.K-1
F82
Hectopascal Per Kelvin
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hong_Kong_dollar
\(HKD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Kong_dollar?oldid=495133277
Hong Kong Dollar
Ukraine
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ukrainian_hryvnia
\(UAH\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_hryvnia?oldid=493064633
Hryvnia
50.80235
0112/2///62720#UAA405
out of use unit of the mass according to the Imperial system of units
[lcwt_av]
CWI
Hundredweight (UK)
45.35924
0112/2///62720#UAA406
out of use unit of the mass according to the Imperial system of units
[scwt_av]
CWA
Hundredweight (US)
An inch is the name of a unit of length in a number of different systems, including Imperial units, and United States customary units. There are 36 inches in a yard and 12 inches in a foot. Corresponding units of area and volume are the square inch and the cubic inch.
0.0254
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Inch
0112/2///62720#UAA539
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inch?oldid=492522790
in
[in_i]
INH
Inch
0.04572
0112/2///62720#UAA540
unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for temperature degree Fahrenheit
[in_i].[degF]-1
K45
Inch Per Degree Fahrenheit
The inch per second is a unit of speed or velocity. It expresses the distance in inches (in) traveled or displaced, divided by time in seconds (s, or sec). The equivalent SI unit is the metre per second. Abbreviations include in/s, in/sec, ips, and less frequently in s.
0.0254
\(in-per-sec\)
0112/2///62720#UAA542
[in_i].s-1
[in_i]/s
IU
Inch per Second
\(\textit{Inch per Square second}\) is an Imperial unit for \(\textit{Linear Acceleration}\) expressed as \(in/s^2\).
0.0254
\(in/s2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB044
[in_i].s-2
[in_i]/s2
IV
Inch per Square second
A square inch is a unit of area, equal to the area of a square with sides of one inch. The following symbols are used to denote square inches: square in, sq inches, sq inch, sq in inches/-2, inch/-2, in/-2, inches^2, \(inch^2\), \(in^2\), \(inches^2\), \(inch^2\), \(in^2\) or in some cases \("^2\). The square inch is a common unit of measurement in the United States and the United Kingdom.
0.00064516
\(in^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA547
[in_i]2
[sin_i]
INK
Square Inch
0.00064516
0112/2///62720#UAA548
power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 2 divided by the SI base unit second
[sin_i].s-1
G08
Square Inch Per Second
The cubic inch is a unit of measurement for volume in the Imperial units and United States customary units systems. It is the volume of a cube with each of its three sides being one inch long. The cubic inch and the cubic foot are still used as units of volume in the United States, although the common SI units of volume, the liter, milliliter, and cubic meter, are continually replacing them, especially in manufacturing and high technology. One cubic foot is equal to exactly 1728 cubic inches.
0.000016387064
\(in^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA549
[cin_i]
[in_i]3
INQ
Cubic Inch
0.000000004551961
0112/2///62720#UAA550
power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit hour
[cin_i].h-1
G56
Cubic Inch Per Hour
"Cubic Inch per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Volume Per Unit Time' expressed as \(in^{3}/min\).
0.00000027311773333333333
\(in^{3}/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAA551
[cin_i].min-1
[cin_i]/min
[in_i]3.min-1
[in_i]3/min
G57
Cubic Inch per Minute
0.00001638706
0112/2///62720#UAA552
power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
[cin_i].s-1
G58
Cubic Inch Per Second
0.0000004162314
0112/2///62720#UAA545
power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 4
[in_i]4
D69
Quartic Inch
Inches of water, wc, inch water column (inch WC), inAq, Aq, or inH2O is a non-SI unit for pressure. The units are by convention and due to the historical measurement of certain pressure differentials. It is used for measuring small pressure differences across an orifice, or in a pipeline or shaft. Inches of water can be converted to a pressure unit using the formula for pressure head. It is defined as the pressure exerted by a column of water of 1 inch in height at defined conditions for example \(39 ^\circ F\) at the standard acceleration of gravity; 1 inAq is approximately equal to 249 pascals at \(0 ^\circ C\).
249.080024
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Inch_of_water
0112/2///62720#UAA553
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inch_of_water?oldid=466175519
inAq
[in_i'H2O]
F78
Inch of Water
Inches of mercury, (inHg) is a unit of measurement for pressure. It is still widely used for barometric pressure in weather reports, refrigeration and aviation in the United States, but is seldom used elsewhere. It is defined as the pressure exerted by a column of mercury of 1 inch in height at \(32 ^\circ F\) at the standard acceleration of gravity. 1 inHg = 3,386.389 pascals at \(0 ^\circ C\).
3386.389
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Inch_of_mercury
0112/2///62720#UAA554
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inch_of_mercury?oldid=486634645
inHg
[in_i'Hg]
F79
Inch of Mercury
<p><strong>International Unit</strong> is a unit for \textit{'Amount Of Substance'} expressed as \(IU\)</p>.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/International_unit
0112/2///62720#UAB603
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_unit?oldid=488801913
IU
[IU]
[iU]
International Unit
"International Unit per Liter" is a unit for 'Serum Or Plasma Level' expressed as \(IU/L\).
\(IU/L\)
[IU].L-1
[IU]/L
[iU].L-1
[iU]/L
International Unit per Liter
International Unit per Litre
Iceland
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Icelandic_kr%C3%B3na
\(ISK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icelandic_króna?oldid=495457496
Iceland Krona
Bhutan, India
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Indian_rupee
\(INR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_rupee?oldid=495120167
Indian Rupee
Iran
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Iranian_rial
\(IRR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_rial?oldid=495299431
Iranian Rial
Iraq
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Iraqi_dinar
\(IQD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraqi_dinar?oldid=494793908
Iraqi Dinar
The SI unit of work or energy, defined to be the work done by a force of one newton acting to move an object through a distance of one meter in the direction in which the force is applied. Equivalently, since kinetic energy is one half the mass times the square of the velocity, one joule is the kinetic energy of a mass of two kilograms moving at a velocity of \(1 m/s\).
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Joule
0112/2///62720#UAA172
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joule?oldid=494340406
\(\text{J}\ \equiv\ \text{joule}\ \equiv\ \text{CV}\ \equiv\ \text{coulomb.volt}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{eV}}{1.602\ 10^{-19}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{electron.volt}}{1.602\ 10^{-19}}\)
The SI unit of work or energy, defined to be the work done by a force of one newton acting to move an object through a distance of one meter in the direction in which the force is applied. Equivalently, since kinetic energy is one half the mass times the square of the velocity, one joule is the kinetic energy of a mass of two kilograms moving at a velocity of 1 m/s. This is the same as 107 ergs in the CGS system, or approximately 0.737 562 foot-pound in the traditional English system. In other energy units, one joule equals about 9.478 170 x 10-4 Btu, 0.238 846 (small) calories, or 2.777 778 x 10-4 watt hour. The joule is named for the British physicist James Prescott Joule (1818-1889), who demonstrated the equivalence of mechanical and thermal energy in a famous experiment in 1843.
J
J
JOU
Joule
\(\textbf{Joule Meter per Mole} is a unit for 'Length Molar Energy' expressed as \(J \cdot m \cdot mol^{-1}\).
1.0
\(J m mol^{-1}\)
J.m.mol-1
Joule Meter per Mole
Joule Metre per Mole
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA181
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
j-m^2
J.m-2
D73
Joule Square Meter
Joule Square Metre
1.0
\(j-m2/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAB487
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
J.m2.kg-1
B20
Joule Square Meter per Kilogram
Joule Square Metre per Kilogram
10000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB188
derived SI unit joule divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
J.cm-2
E43
Joule Per Square Centimeter
Joule Per Square Centimetre
Radiant energy per 10^-4 SI unit area over a period of one day.
0.115740740740741
J.cm-2.d-1
Joules per square centimetre per day
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA174
SI derived unit joule divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
J.g-1
D95
Joule Per Gram
3600.0
SI derived unit joule divided by the 3600 times the SI base unit second
J.h-1
Joule Per Hour
Joule Per Kelvin (J/K) is a unit in the category of Entropy. It is also known as joules per kelvin, joule/kelvin. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Joule Per Kelvin (J/K) has a dimension of \(ML^{2}T^{-2}Q^{-1}\( where \(M\) is mass, L is length, T is time, and Q is temperature. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(J/K\)
0112/2///62720#UAA173
J.K-1
JE
Joule per Kelvin
Joule Per Kilogram} (\(J/kg\)) is a unit in the category of Thermal heat capacity. It is also known as \textit{joule/kilogram}, \textit{joules per kilogram}. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. The unit has a dimension of \(L2T^{-2}\) where \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(J/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAA175
J.kg-1
J/kg
J2
Joule per Kilogram
Specific heat capacity - The heat required to raise unit mass of a substance by unit temperature interval under specified conditions, such as constant pressure: usually measured in joules per kelvin per kilogram. Symbol \(c_p\) (for constant pressure) Also called specific heat.
1.0
\(J-per-kgK\)
0112/2///62720#UAA176
\(J/(kg \cdot K)\)
J.kg-1.K-1
B11
Joule per Kilogram Kelvin
Joules per kilogram per Kelvin
1.0
\(j-per-kg-k-m3\)
J.kg-1.K.m-3
Joule per Kilogram Kelvin Cubic Meter
Joule per Kilogram Kelvin Cubic Metre
1.0
\(j-per-kg-k-pa\)
J.kg-1.K-1.Pa-1
Joule per Kilogram Kelvin per Pascal
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
\(j/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA178
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
J.m-1
J/m
B12
Joule Per Meter
Joule Per Metre
Joule Per Square Meter (\(J/m^2\)) is a unit in the category of Energy density. It is also known as joules per square meter, joule per square metre, joule/square meter, joule/square metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system.
1.0
\(J/m^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA179
J.m-2
J/m2
B13
Joule per Square Meter
Joule per Square Metre
\(\textit{Joule Per Cubic Meter}\) (\(J/m^{3}\)) is a unit in the category of Energy density. It is also known as joules per cubic meter, joule per cubic metre, joules per cubic metre, joule/cubic meter, joule/cubic metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. It has a dimension of \(ML^{-1}T^{-2}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(j-per-m3\)
0112/2///62720#UAA180
J.m-3
J/m3
B8
Joule per Cubic Meter
Joule per Cubic Metre
\(\textbf{Joule per Cubic Meter Kelvin} is a unit for 'Volumetric Heat Capacity' expressed as \(J/(m^{3} K)\).
1.0
\(J/(m^{3} K)\)
J.m-3.K-1
Joule per Cubic Meter Kelvin
Joule per Cubic Metre Kelvin
\(\textbf{Joule Per Quartic Meter} (\(J/m^4\)) is a unit for the spectral concentration of radiant energy density (in terms of wavelength), or the spectral radiant energy density (in terms of wave length). This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system.
1.0
\(J/m^4\)
0112/2///62720#UAA177
J.m-4
B14
Joule per Quartic Meter
Joule per Quartic Metre
The joule per mole (symbol: \(J\cdot mol^{-1}\)) is an SI derived unit of energy per amount of material. Energy is measured in joules, and the amount of material is measured in moles. Physical quantities measured in \(J\cdot mol^{-1}\)) usually describe quantities of energy transferred during phase transformations or chemical reactions. Division by the number of moles facilitates comparison between processes involving different quantities of material and between similar processes involving different types of materials. The meaning of such a quantity is always context-dependent and, particularly for chemical reactions, is dependent on the (possibly arbitrary) definition of a 'mole' for a particular process.
1.0
\(J/mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAA183
J.mol-1
B15
Joule per Mole
Energy needed to heat one mole of substance by 1 Kelvin, under standard conditions (not standard temperature and pressure STP). The standard molar entropy is usually given the symbol S, and has units of joules per mole kelvin ( \( J\cdot mol^{-1} K^{-1}\)). Unlike standard enthalpies of formation, the value of S is an absolute. That is, an element in its standard state has a nonzero value of S at room temperature.
1.0
\(J/(mol-K)\)
0112/2///62720#UAA184
J.mol-1.K-1
B16
Joule per Mole Kelvin
1.0
SI derived unit joule divided by the SI base unit second
J.s-1
Joule Per Second
The magnetic moment of a magnet is a quantity that determines the force that the magnet can exert on electric currents and the torque that a magnetic field will exert on it. A loop of electric current, a bar magnet, an electron, a molecule, and a planet all have magnetic moments. The unit for magnetic moment is not a base unit in the International System of Units (SI) and it can be represented in more than one way. For example, in the current loop definition, the area is measured in square meters and I is measured in amperes, so the magnetic moment is measured in ampere-square meters (A m2). In the equation for torque on a moment, the torque is measured in joules and the magnetic field in tesla, so the moment is measured in Joules per Tesla (J u00b7T-1). These two representations are equivalent: 1 A u00b7m2 = 1 J u00b7T-1.
1.0
\(j-per-t\)
0112/2///62720#UAB336
J.T-1
Joule per Tesla
A measure of the diamagnetic energy, for a Bohr-radius spread around a magnetic axis, per square Tesla.
1.0
\(J T^{-2}\)
http://www.eng.fsu.edu/~dommelen/quantum/style_a/elecmagfld.html
J.T-2
Joule per Square Tesla
\(The joule-second is a unit equal to a joule multiplied by a second, used to measure action or angular momentum. The joule-second is the unit used for Planck's constant.\)
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB151
J s
J.s
B18
Joule Second
\(\textbf{Joule Second per Mole} is a unit for 'Molar Angular Momentum' expressed as \(J s mol^{-1}\).
1.0
\(J s mol^{-1}\)
J.s.mol-1
Joule Second per Mole
Jamaica
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jamaican_dollar
\(JMD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_dollar?oldid=494039981
Jamaican Dollar
Japan
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Japanese_yen
\(JPY\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_yen?oldid=493771966
Japanese yen
Jordan
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jordanian_dinar
\(JOD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jordanian_dinar?oldid=495270728
Jordanian Dinar
\(The SI base unit of temperature, previously called the degree Kelvin. One kelvin represents the same temperature difference as one degree Celsius. In 1967 the General Conference on Weights and Measures defined the temperature of the triple point of water (the temperature at which water exists simultaneously in the gaseous, liquid, and solid states) to be exactly 273.16 kelvins. Since this temperature is also equal to 0.01 u00b0C, the temperature in kelvins is always equal to 273.15 plus the temperature in degrees Celsius. The kelvin equals exactly 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit. The unit is named for the British mathematician and physicist William Thomson (1824-1907), later known as Lord Kelvin after he was named Baron Kelvin of Largs.\)
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kelvin
0112/2///62720#UAA185
0112/2///62720#UAD721
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelvin?oldid=495075694
K
K
KEL
Kelvin
Unavailable
1.0
K.m
Kelvin metres
Unavailable
1.0
K.m.s-1
Kelvin metres per second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB488
product of the SI base unit kelvin and the SI base unit metre divided by the derived SI unit watt
K.m.W-1
H35
Kelvin Meter Per Watt
Kelvin Metre Per Watt
Unavailable
1.0
K.m2.kg-1.s-1
Kelvin square metres per kilogram per second
Unavailable
1.0
K.Pa.s-1
Kelvin Pascals per second
\(\textbf{Kelvin per Hour} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(K / h\).
3600.0
\(K / h\)
0112/2///62720#UAA189
K.h-1
F10
Kelvin per Hour
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA186
SI base unit kelvin divided by the SI base unit kelvin
K.K-1
F02
Kelvin Per Kelvin
A change of temperature on the Kelvin temperature scale in one SI unit of length.
1.0
K.m-1
Degrees Kelvin per metre
Kelvins per metre
\(\textbf{Kelvin per Minute} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(K / m\).
60.0
\(K / m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA191
K.min-1
F11
Kelvin per Minute
\(\textbf{Kelvin per Second} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Time' expressed as \(K / s\).
1.0
\(K / s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA192
K.s-1
K/s
F12
Kelvin per Second
\(\textbf{Kelvin per Tesla} is a unit for 'Temperature Per Magnetic Flux Density' expressed as \(K T^{-1}\).
1.0
\(K T^{-1}\)
K.T-1
Kelvin per Tesla
Thermal resistance is a heat property and a measure of a temperature difference by which an object or material resists a heat flow (heat per time unit or thermal resistance). Thermal resistance is the reciprocal thermal conductance. Absolute thermal resistance is the temperature difference across a structure when a unit of heat energy flows through it in unit time. It is the reciprocal of thermal conductance. The SI units of thermal resistance are kelvins per watt or the equivalent degrees Celsius per watt (the two are the same since as intervals).</p>
1.0
\(K/W\)
0112/2///62720#UAA187
K.W-1
K/W
B21
Kelvin per Watt
Unavailable
1.0
K.s
Kelvin second
Unavailable
1.0
K2
Square Kelvin
A unit of catalytic activity used especially in the chemistry of enzymes. A catalyst is a substance that starts or speeds a chemical reaction. Enzymes are proteins that act as catalysts within the bodies of living plants and animals. A catalyst has an activity of one katal if it enables a reaction to proceed at the rate of one mole per second.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Katal
0112/2///62720#UAB196
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katal?oldid=486431865
kat
kat
KAT
Katal
1000 pound-force
4448.222
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kip
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kip?oldid=492552722
kip
k[lbf_av]
Kip
"Kip per Square Inch" is a unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(kip/in^{2}\).
6894757.89
\(kip/in^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB242
k[lbf_av].[in_i]-2
Kip per Square Inch
The knot (pronounced 'not') is a unit of speed equal to one nautical mile (1.852 km) per hour, approximately 1.151 mph. The abbreviation \(kn\) is preferred by the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO), which includes every major sea-faring nation; however, the abbreviations kt (singular) and kts (plural) are also widely used. However, use of the abbreviation kt for knot conflicts with the SI symbol for kilotonne. The knot is a non-SI unit accepted for use with the International System of Units (SI). Worldwide, the knot is used in meteorology, and in maritime and air navigation - for example, a vessel travelling at 1 knot along a meridian travels one minute of geographic latitude in one hour. Etymologically, the term knot derives from counting the number of knots in the line that unspooled from the reel of a chip log in a specific time.
0.5144444444444445
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knot
0112/2///62720#UAB110
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knot?oldid=495066194
kn
[kn_i]
KNT
Knot
kt
kts
\(\textit{Knot per Second}\) is a unit for 'Linear Acceleration' expressed as \(kt/s\).
0.5144444444444445
\(kt/s\)
[kn_i].s-1
[kn_i]/s
Knot per Second
100.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kayser
\(\(cm^{-1}\)\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayser?oldid=458489166
Ky
Kayser
Kenya
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kenyan_shilling
\(KES\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenyan_shilling?oldid=489547027
Kenyan Shilling
The kibibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information equivalent to 1024 bytes.
5678.2617031470719747459655389854
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
KiB
KibiByte
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA557
kA
kA
B22
kiloampere
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB053
product of the 1 000-fold of the SI base unit ampere and the unit hour
kA.h
TAH
Kiloampere Hour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA558
1 000-fold of the SI base unit ampere divided by the SI base unit metre
kA.m-1
B24
Kiloampere Per Meter
Kiloampere Per Metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA559
1 000-fold of the SI base unit ampere divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
kA.m-2
B23
Kiloampere Per Square Meter
Kiloampere Per Square Metre
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to 100,000 Pa. It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000 Pa = 1 bar \approx 750.0616827 Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
100000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB088
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
kbar
kbar
KBA
Kilobar
A kilobit per second (kB/s) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1,000 bits per second.
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA586
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_rate_units#Kilobit_per_second
kbps
kbit.s-2
C74
Kilobit per Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA561
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit becquerel
kBq
2Q
Kilobecquerel
The kilobyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information equivalent to 1024 bytes. Although the prefix kilo- means 1000, the term kilobyte and symbol kB have historically been used to refer to either 1024 (210) bytes or 1000 (103) bytes, dependent upon context, in the fields of computer science and information technology.
5678.2617031470719747459655389854
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Byte
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte?oldid=493588918
kB
kBy
Kilo Byte
A kilobyte per second (kByte/s) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1024 bytes per second or 8096 bits per second.
5678.2617031470719747459655389854
0112/2///62720#UAB306
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_rate_units#Kilobyte_per_second
kbps
kBy.s-1
Kilobyte per Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA563
kC
kC
B26
KiloCoulomb
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA564
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
kC.m-2
B28
Kilocoulomb Per Square Meter
Kilocoulomb Per Square Metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA565
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
kC.m-3
B27
Kilocoulomb Per Cubic Meter
Kilocoulomb Per Cubic Metre
\(\textbf{Kilocalorie} is a unit for \textit{Energy And Work} expressed as \(kcal\).
4184.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Calorie
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calorie?oldid=494307622
kcal
kcal
Kilocalorie
\(kilocal-per-cm-sec-degc\)
kcol.cm-1.s-1.Cel-1
Kilocalorie per Centimeter Second Degree Celsius
Kilocalorie per Centimetre Second Degree Celsius
"Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter" is a unit for 'Energy Per Area' expressed as \(kcal/cm^{2}\).
0.0000004184
\(kcal/cm^{2}\)
kcal.cm-2
Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter
Kilocalorie per Square Centimetre
"Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter Minute" is a unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(kcal/(cm^{2}-min)\).
0.0000697333333
\(kcal/(cm^{2}-min)\)
kcal.cm-2.min-1
Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter Minute
Kilocalorie per Square Centimetre Minute
"Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter Second" is a unit for 'Power Per Area' expressed as \(kcal/(cm^{2}-s)\).
0.0000004184
\(kcal/(cm^{2}-s)\)
kcal.cm-2.s-1
Kilocalorie per Square Centimeter Second
Kilocalorie per Square Centimetre Second
"Kilocalorie per Gram" is a unit for 'Specific Energy' expressed as \(kcal/gm\).
4184000.0
\(kcal/gm\)
kcal.g-1
Kilocalorie per Gram
\(\textbf{Calorie per Gram Degree Celsius} is a unit for 'Specific Heat Capacity' expressed as \(kcal/(gm-degC)\).
\(kcal/(gm-degC)\)
cal.g-1.Cel-1
Calorie per Gram Degree Celsius
\(\textbf{Kilocalorie per Minute} is a unit for \textit{Heat Flow Rate} and \textit{Power} expressed as \(kcal/min\).
69.7333333
\(kcal/min\)
kcal.min-1
Kilocalorie Per Minute
The kilocalorie per mole is a derived unit of energy per Avogadro's number of particles. It is the quotient of a kilocalorie (1000 thermochemical gram calories) and a mole, mainly used in the United States. In SI units, it is equal to \(4.184 kJ/mol\), or \(6.9477 \times 10 J per molecule\). At room temperature it is equal to 1.688 . Physical quantities measured in \(kcal\cdot mol\) are usually thermodynamical quantities; mostly free energies such as: Heat of vaporization Heat of fusion</p>.
\(kcal/mol\)
kcal.mol-1
Kilocalorie per Mole
\(\textbf{Kilocalorie per Mole Degree Celsius} is a unit for 'Molar Heat Capacity' expressed as \(kcal/(mol-degC)\).
\(kcal/(mol-degC)\)
kcal.mol-1.Cel-1
Kilocalorie per Mole Degree Celsius
\(\textbf{Kilocalorie per Second} is a unit for \textit{Heat Flow Rate} and \textit{Power} expressed as \(kcal/s\).
4184.0
\(kcal/s\)
kcal.s-1
Kilocalorie Per Second
4186.8
0112/2///62720#UAA589
1000-fold of the unit calorie, which is used particularly for calorific values of food
kcal_IT
E14
Kilocalorie (international Table)
1.163
0112/2///62720#UAA588
1 000-fold of the no longer approved unit international calorie for energy divided by the product of the SI base unit metre, the unit hour for time and the unit degree Celsius for temperature
kcal_IT.h-1.m-1.Cel-1
K52
Kilocalorie (international Table) Per Hour Meter Degree Celsius
Kilocalorie (international Table) Per Hour Metre Degree Celsius
4190.0
0112/2///62720#UAA587
1000-fold of the unit calorie, which is used particularly for calorific values of food
kcal_m
K51
Kilocalorie (mean)
4184.0
0112/2///62720#UAA590
1000-fold of the unit calorie, which is used particularly for calorific values of food
[Cal]
kcal_th
K53
Kilocalorie (thermochemical)
1.162230555555556
0112/2///62720#UAB184
1 000-fold of the non-legal unit thermochemical calorie divided by the unit hour
kcal_th.h-1
E15
Kilocalorie (thermochemical) Per Hour
69.73383333333334
0112/2///62720#UAA591
1000-fold of the unit calorie divided by the unit minute
kcal_th.min-1
K54
Kilocalorie (thermochemical) Per Minute
4184.0
0112/2///62720#UAA592
1000-fold of the unit calorie divided by the SI base unit second
kcal_th.s-1
K55
Kilocalorie (thermochemical) Per Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB046
1 000-fold of the unit curie
kCi
2R
Kilocurie
"Kilo Electron Volt" is a unit for 'Energy And Work' expressed as \(keV\).
0.00000000000000016021765314
keV
keV
Kilo Electron Volt
"Kilo Electron Volt per Micrometer" is a unit for 'Linear Energy Transfer' expressed as \(keV/microM\).
0.000000000160217653
\(keV/microM\)
keV.um-1
Kilo Electron Volt per Micrometer
Kilo Electron Volt per Micrometre
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAB136
1 000-fold of the CGS unit of the magnetic flux density B
kG
78
Kilogauss
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kilogram
0112/2///62720#UAA594
0112/2///62720#UAD720
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilogram?oldid=493633626
The kilogram or kilogramme (SI symbol: kg), also known as the kilo, is the base unit of mass in the International System of Units and is defined as being equal to the mass of the International Prototype Kilogram (IPK), which is almost exactly equal to the mass of one liter of water. The avoirdupois (or international) pound, used in both the Imperial system and U.S. customary units, is defined as exactly 0.45359237 kg, making one kilogram approximately equal to 2.2046 avoirdupois pounds.
kg
kg
KGM
Kilogram
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAA600
product of the SI base unit kilogram and the 0 0001fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
kg.cm2
F18
Kilogram Square Centimeter
Kilogram Square Centimetre
\(\textbf{Kilogram Kelvin} is a unit for 'Mass Temperature' expressed as \(kg-K\).
1.0
\(kg-K\)
kg.K
Kilogram Kelvin
"Kilogram Meter Per Second" is a unit for 'Linear Momentum' expressed as \(kg-m/s\).
1.0
\(kg-m/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA615
kg.m.s-1
kg.m/s
B31
Kilogram Meter Per Second
Kilogram Metre Per Second
"Kilogram Square Meter" is a unit for 'Moment Of Inertia' expressed as \(kg-m^2\).
1.0
\(kg-m2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA622
kg.m2
B32
Kilogram Square Meter
Kilogram Square Metre
"Kilogram Square Meter Per Second" is a unit for 'Angular Momentum' expressed as \(kg-m^2-s^{-1}\).
1.0
\(kg-m2/sec\)
0112/2///62720#UAA623
kg.m2.s-1
B33
Kilogram Square Meter Per Second
Kilogram Square Metre Per Second
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA627
product of the SI base kilogram and the 0.001-fold of the power of the SI base metre with the exponent 2
kg.mm2
F19
Kilogram Square Millimeter
Kilogram Square Millimetre
10000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB174
SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
kg.cm-2
D5
Kilogram Per Square Centimeter
Kilogram Per Square Centimetre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA597
SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.000 001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
kg.cm-3
G31
Kilogram Per Cubic Centimeter
Kilogram Per Cubic Centimetre
0.00001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA601
SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit day
kg.d-1
F30
Kilogram Per Day
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA604
SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
kg.dm-3
B34
Kilogram Per Cubic Decimeter
Kilogram Per Cubic Decimetre
Kilogram Per Hectare is a unit of mass per area. Kilogram Per Hectare (kg/ha) has a dimension of ML-2 where M is mass, and L is length. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit kg/m2 by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.0001.
0.0001
\(kg/hare\)
kg.har-1
kg/har
Kilogram per Hectare
Kilogram Per Hour (kg/h) is a unit in the category of Mass flow rate. It is also known as kilogram/hour. Kilogram Per Hour (kg/h) has a dimension of MT-1 where M is mass, and T is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit kg/s by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.000277777777778.
0.000277777778
\(kg/h\)
0112/2///62720#UAA607
kg.h-1
kg/h
E93
Kilogram per Hour
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA610
SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit kilogram
kg.kg-1
3H
Kilogram Per Kilogram
One SI standard unit of mass over the square of one thousand standard unit of length.
0.000001
kg.km-2
Kilograms per square kilometre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA611
SI base unit kilogram divided by the 1 000-fold of the SI base unit mol
kg.mol-1
F24
Kilogram Per Kilomol
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA612
SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit litre
kg.L-1
kg/L
B35
Kilogram Per Liter
Kilogram Per Litre
Kilogram Per Meter (kg/m) is a unit in the category of Linear mass density. It is also known as kilogram/meter, kilogram/metre, kilograms per meter, kilogram per metre, kilograms per metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Kilogram Per Meter (kg/m) has a dimension of ML-1 where M is mass, and L is length. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(kg/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA616
kg.m-1
kg/m
KL
Kilogram per Meter
Kilogram per Metre
One SI standard unit of mass over one SI standard unit of length over 3600 times one SI standard unit of time.
0.000277777777777778
kg.m-1.h-1
Kilograms per metre per hour
Unavailable
1.0
kg.m-1.s-1
Kilograms per metre per second
The SI unit of pressure. The pascal is the standard pressure unit in the MKS metric system, equal to one newton per square meter or one "kilogram per meter per second per second." The unit is named for Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), French philosopher and mathematician, who was the first person to use a barometer to measure differences in altitude.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pascal
kg/m/s^2
kg.m-1.s-2
Kilograms per metre per square second
Kilogram Per Square Meter (kg/m2) is a unit in the category of Surface density. It is also known as kilograms per square meter, kilogram per square metre, kilograms per square metre, kilogram/square meter, kilogram/square metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Kilogram Per Square Meter (kg/m2) has a dimension of ML-2 where M is mass, and L is length. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(kg/m^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA617
kg.m-2
kg/m2
28
Kilogram per Square Meter
Kilogram per Square Metre
Unavailable
1.0
kg.m-2.s-1
Kilograms per square metre per second
Kilogram per cubic metre is an SI derived unit of density, defined by mass in kilograms divided by volume in cubic metres. The official SI symbolic abbreviation is \(kg \cdot m^{-3}\), or equivalently either \(kg/m^3\).
1.0
\(kg/m^3\)
0112/2///62720#UAA619
Kilogram per cubic metre is an SI derived unit of density, defined by mass in kilograms divided by volume in cubic metres. The official SI symbolic abbreviation is kg . m^-3, or equivalently either kg/m^3.
kg.m-3
kg/m3
KMQ
Kilogram per Cubic Meter
Kilogram per Cubic Metre
kilogram per cubic meter
kilogram per cubic metre
Unavailable
1.0
kg.m-3.s-1
Kilograms per cubic metre per second
0.01666667
0112/2///62720#UAA624
SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit minute
kg.min-1
kg/min
F31
Kilogram Per Minute
<p>In chemistry, the molar mass M is defined as the mass of a given substance (chemical element or chemical compound) divided by its amount of substance. It is a physical property of a given substance. The base SI unit for molar mass is \(kg/mol\). However, for historical reasons, molar masses are almost always expressed in \(g/mol\). As an example, the molar mass of water is approximately: \(18.01528(33) \; g/mol\)</p>.
1.0
\(kg mol^{-1}\)
kg.mol-1
kg/mol
Kilogram per Mol
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB070
SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
kg.mm-1
KW
Kilogram Per Millimeter
Kilogram Per Millimetre
Kilogram Per Second (kg/s) is a unit in the category of Mass flow rate. It is also known as kilogram/second, kilograms per second. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Kilogram Per Second (kg/s) has a dimension of \(MT^{-1}\) where M is mass, and T is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(kg/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA629
kg.s-1
kg/s
KGS
Kilogram per Second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA618
SI base unit kilogram divided by the product of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2 and the SI base unit second
kg.(s.m2)-1
kg.s-1.m-2)
kg/(s.m2)
H56
Kilogram Per Second Square Meter
Kilogram Per Second Square Metre
1.0
\(kg-per-sec2\)
\(kg \cdot s^2\)
kg.s-2
kg/s2
Kilogram per Square Second
1.0
\(kilog-sec2\)
kg.s2
Kilogram Square Second
Unavailable
1.0
kg2.s-2
Square Kilograms per square second
"Kilogram Force" is a unit for 'Force' expressed as \(kgf\).
9.80665
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kilogram-force
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilogram-force?oldid=493375479
kgf
kgf
Kilogram Force
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAA634
product of the unit kilogram-force and the SI base unit metre
kgf.m
B38
Kilogram?force Meter
Kilogram?force Metre
98066.5
0112/2///62720#UAB189
product of the unit kilogram-force and the SI base unit metre divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
kgf.m.cm-2
E44
Kilogram?force Meter Per Square Centimeter
Kilogram?force Metre Per Square Centimetre
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAB154
product of the SI base unit metre and the unit kilogram-force according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
kgf.m.s-1
B39
Kilogram?force Meter Per Second
Kilogram?force Metre Per Second
"Kilogram Force per Square Centimeter" is a unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(kgf/cm^{2}\).
98066.5
\(kgf/cm^{2}\)
kgf.cm-2
Kilogram Force per Square Centimeter
Kilogram Force per Square Centimetre
"Kilogram Force Meter" is a unit for 'Torque' expressed as \(kgf-m\).
9.80665
\(kgf-m\)
kgf.m
Kilogram Force Meter
Kilogram Force Metre
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAA635
not SI conform unit of the pressure
kgf.m-2
B40
Kilogram Force Per Square Meter
Kilogram Force Per Square Metre
9806650.0
0112/2///62720#UAA636
not SI conform unit of the pressure
kgf.mm-2
E41
Kilogram Force Per Square Millimeter
Kilogram Force Per Square Millimetre
"Kilohertz" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Frequency' expressed as \(KHz\).
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA566
kHz
kHz
KHZ
Kilohertz
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA567
product of the 1 000-fold of the SI derived unit hertz and the SI base unit metre
kHz.m
M17
Kilohertz Meter
Kilohertz Metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA568
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule
kJ
KJO
Kilojoule
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA569
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the SI base unit kelvin
kJ.K-1
kJ/K
B41
Kilojoule Per Kelvin
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA570
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the SI base unit kilogram
kJ.kg-1
kJ/kg
B42
Kilojoule Per Kilogram
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA571
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the product of the SI base unit kilogram and the SI base unit kelvin
kJ.(kg.K)-1
kJ.kg-1.K-1
kJ/(kg.K)
B43
Kilojoule Per Kilogram Kelvin
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA572
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the SI base unit mol
kJ.mol-1
B44
Kilojoule Per Mole
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB114
1 000-fold of the unit litre
kL
K6
Kilolitre
Kilolitre
0.00277777777778
0112/2///62720#UAB121
unit of the volume kilolitres divided by the unit hour
kL.h-1
4X
Kilolitre Per Hour
Kilolitre Per Hour
2728.302797866667
0112/2///62720#UAB483
product of the Anglo-American unit pound-force and foot divided by the SI base unit ampere
[lbf_av].[ft_i].A-1
F22
Pound Force Foot Per Ampere
2989.067
0112/2///62720#UAB484
product of the Anglo-American unit pound-force and the Anglo-American unit foot divided by the Anglo-American unit pound (US) of mass
[lbf_av].[ft_i].[lb_av]-1
G20
Pound Force Foot Per Pound
14593.904199475066
0112/2///62720#UAB192
unit of the length-related force
[lbf_av].[ft_i]-1
F17
Pound Force Per Foot
6894757.89
0112/2///62720#UAB138
1 000-fold of the unit for pressure psi as a compounded unit pound-force according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the power of the unit Inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units by exponent 2
k[lbf_av].[sin_i]-1
84
Kilopound Force Per Square Inch
A common metric unit of length or distance. One kilometer equals exactly 1000 meters, about 0.621 371 19 mile, 1093.6133 yards, or 3280.8399 feet. Oddly, higher multiples of the meter are rarely used; even the distances to the farthest galaxies are usually measured in kilometers.
1000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kilometre
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilometre?oldid=494821851
km
km
Kilometer
Kilometre
A change in location of a distance of one thousand metres in an elapsed time of one day (86400 seconds).
0.0115740740740741
km.d-1
Kilometres per day
"Kilometer per Hour" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as \(km/hr\).
0.2777777777777778
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kilometres_per_hour
\(km/hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAA638
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilometres_per_hour?oldid=487674812
km.h-1
km/h
KMH
Kilometer per Hour
Kilometre per Hour
"Kilometer per Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as \(km/s\).
1000.0
\(km/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAB392
km.s-1
km/s
Kilometer per Second
Kilometre per Second
\(\textit{Cubic Kilometer per Square Second}\) is a unit for \(\textit{Standard Gravitational Parameter}\) expressed as \(km^3/s^2\).
1000000000.0
\(km^3/s^2\)
km3.s-2
km3/s2
Cubic Kilometer per Square Second
Cubic Kilometre per Square Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA640
1 000-fold of the SI base unit mol
kmol
B45
Kilomole
0.277777777777778
0112/2///62720#UAA641
1 000-fold of the SI base unit mole divided by the unit for time hour
kmol.h-1
K58
Kilomole Per Hour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA642
1 000-fold of the SI base unit mol divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
kmol.m-3
B46
Kilomole Per Cubic Meter
Kilomole Per Cubic Metre
16.94444
0112/2///62720#UAA645
1 000-fold of the SI base unit mole divided by the unit for time minute
kmol.min-1
K61
Kilomole Per Minute
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA646
1 000-fold of the SI base unit mol divided by the SI base unit second
kmol.s-1
E94
Kilomole Per Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA573
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit newton
kN
B47
Kilonewton
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA574
1 000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit metre
kN.m
B48
Kilonewton Meter
Kilonewton Metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA555
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
kOhm
B49
Kiloohm
Same as kilogramForce
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAB059
kp
kgf
B51
Kilopond
Kilopascal is a unit of pressure. 1 kPa is approximately the pressure exerted by a 10-g mass resting on a 1-cm2 area. 101.3 kPa = 1 atm. There are 1,000 pascals in 1 kilopascal.
1000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pascal_%28unit%29
0112/2///62720#UAA575
kPa
kPa
KPA
Kilopascal
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB130
sector-specific unit of the burst index as 1 000-fold of the derived unit for pressure pascal related to the substance, represented as a quotient from the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
kPa.m2.g-1
33
Kilopascal Square Meter per Gram
Kilopascal Square Metre per Gram
100000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA577
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the unit bar
kPa.bar-1
F03
Kilopascal Per Bar
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA576
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the SI base unit kelvin
kPa.K-1
F83
Kilopascal Per Kelvin
100000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB060
1 000-fold of the derived SI unit pascal divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
kPa.mm-1
34
Kilopascal Per Millimeter
Kilopascal Per Millimetre
\(\textbf{Kilopascal Absolute} is a SI System unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(KPaA\).
1.0
KPaA
kPa{absolute}
Kilopascal Absolute
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAB059
illegal unit of the weight, defined as mass of 1 kg which receives a weight of 1 kp through gravitation at sea level, which equates to a force of 9,806 65 newton
B51
Kilopond
0.258
0112/2///62720#UAB057
1 000-fold of the unit roentgen
kR
KR
Kiloroentgen
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA578
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit siemens
kS
B53
Kilosiemens
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA579
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
kS.m-1
B54
Kilosiemens Per Meter
Kilosiemens Per Metre
"Killosecond" is an Imperial unit for 'Time' expressed as \(ks\).
1000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Millisecond
0112/2///62720#UAA647
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millisecond?oldid=495102042
ks
ks
B52
kilosecond
KiloTonne
907184.7
0112/2///62720#UAB080
1 000 000-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
kt
KTN
Metric KiloTON
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA580
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit volt
kV
KVT
Kilovolt
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA581
1 000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit volt and the SI base unit ampere
kV.A
KVA
Kilovolt Ampere
3600000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB160
product of the 1 000-fold of the unit for apparent by ampere and the unit hour
kV.A.h
C79
Kilovolt Ampere Hour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA648
1 000-fold of the unit var
kV.A{reactive}
KVR
Kilovolt Ampere Reactive
3600000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB195
product of the 1 000-fold of the unit volt ampere reactive and the unit hour
kV.A.h{reactive}
K3
Kilovolt Ampere Reactive Hour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA582
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit volt divided by the SI base unit metre
kV.m-1
B55
Kilovolt Per Meter
Kilovolt Per Metre
\(The kilowatt is a derived unit of power in the International System of Units (SI), The unit, defined as 1,000 joule per second, measures the rate of energy conversion or transfer.\)
1000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Watt
0112/2///62720#UAA583
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watt?oldid=494906356
kW
kW
KWT
Kilowatt
The kilowatt hour, or kilowatt-hour, (symbol \(kW \cdot h\), \(kW h\) or \(kWh\)) is a unit of energy equal to 1000 watt hours or 3.6 megajoules. For constant power, energy in watt hours is the product of power in watts and time in hours. The kilowatt hour is most commonly known as a billing unit for energy delivered to consumers by electric utilities.
3600000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kilowatt_hour
\(kW-h\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilowatt_hour?oldid=494927235
kW.h
Kilowatthour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA585
1 000-fold of the SI derived unit weber divided by the SI base unit metre
kWb.m-1
B56
Kiloweber Per Meter
Kiloweber Per Metre
Papua New Guinea
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kina
\(PGK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kina?oldid=477155361
Kina
Estonia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Estonian_kroon
\(EEK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estonian_kroon?oldid=492626188
Kroon
Kuwait
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kuwaiti_dinar
\(KWD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuwaiti_dinar?oldid=489547428
Kuwaiti Dinar
Angola
1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Angolan_kwanza
\(AOA\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angolan_kwanza?oldid=491748749
Kwanza
Myanmar
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Myanma_kyat
\(MMK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myanma_kyat?oldid=441109905
Kyat
The \(litre\) (American spelling: \(\textit{liter}\); SI symbol \(l\) or \(L\)) is a non-SI metric system unit of volume equal to \(1 \textit{cubic decimetre}\) (\(dm^3\)), 1,000 cubic centimetres (\(cm^3\)) or \(1/1000 \textit{cubic metre}\). If the lower case "L" is used as the symbol, it is sometimes rendered as a cursive "l" to help distinguish it from the capital "I", although this usage has no official approval by any international bureau.
0.001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Litre
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litre?oldid=494846400
L
l
L
l
Liter
Litre
litre
0.00000001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA652
unit litre divided by the unit day
L.d-1
L/d
LD
Liter Per Day
Litre Per Day
0.0000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA655
Unit litre divided by the unit hour
L.h-1
L/h
E32
Liter Per Hour
Litre Per Hour
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA650
unit litre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
L.K-1
L/K
G28
Liter Per Kelvin
Litre Per Kelvin
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAB380
unit of the volume litre divided by the SI base unit kilogram
L.kg-1
L/kg
H83
Liter Per Kilogram
Litre Per Kilogram
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA658
volume ratio consisting of the unit litre divided by the unit litre
L.L-1
L/L
K62
Liter Per Liter
Litre Per Litre
0.00001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA659
unit litre divided by the unit minute
L.min-1
L/min
L2
Liter Per Minute
Litre Per Minute
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA662
unit litre divided by the SI base unit mol
L.mol-1
L/mol
B58
Liter Per Mole
Litre Per Mole
The inverse of a molar concentration - the untits of per molarity.
1000.0
L.umol-1
Litres per micromole
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA664
unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
L.s-1
L/s
G51
Liter Per Second
Litre Per Second
The lambert (symbol \(L\), \(la\) or \(Lb\)) is a non-SI unit of luminance. A related unit of luminance, the foot-lambert, is used in the lighting, cinema and flight simulation industries. The SI unit is the candela per square metre (\(cd/m^2\)).
3183.09886
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lambert
0112/2///62720#UAB259
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambert?oldid=494078267
L
Lmb
Lambert
A pound of mass, based on the international standard definition of the pound as exactly 0.45359237 kg.
0.45359237
lbm
[lb_av]
Pound Mass
\(\textbf{Pound Degree Fahrenheit} is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Temperature' expressed as \(lb-degF\).
\(lb-degF\)
[lb_av].[degF]
Pound Degree Fahrenheit
\(\textbf{Pound Degree Rankine} is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Temperature' expressed as \(lb-degR\).
\(lb-degR\)
[lb_av].[degR]
Pound Degree Rankine
0.04214011
0112/2///62720#UAA671
product of the unit pound according to the avoirdupois system of units and the power of the unit foot according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 2
[lb_av].[sft_i]
K65
Pound Mass (avoirdupois) Square Foot
0.011521246198
0112/2///62720#UAB194
unit of the unbalance (product of avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units and inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units)
[lb_av].[in_i]
IA
Pound Mass (avoirdupois) Inch
0.0002926397
0112/2///62720#UAA672
product of the unit pound according to the avoirdupois system of units and the power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 2
[lb_av].[sin_i]
F20
Pound Mass (avoirdupois) Square Inch
<p><strong>Pound Mole</strong> is a unit for \textit{'Mass Amount Of Substance'} expressed as \(lb-mol\).</p>.
0.45359237
\(lb-mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAB402
[lb_av].mol
Pound Mole
\(\textbf{Pound Mole Degree Fahrenheit} is a unit for 'Mass Amount Of Substance Temperature' expressed as \(lb-mol-degF\).
\(lb-mol-degF\)
[lb_av].mol.[degF]
Pound Mole Degree Fahrenheit
0.000005249912
0112/2///62720#UAA673
unit of the mass avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the unit for time day
[lb_av].d-1
K66
Pound (avoirdupois) Per Day
"Pound per Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Length' expressed as \(lb/ft\).
1.4881639435695537
\(lb/ft\)
[lb_av].[ft_i]-1
Pound per Foot
"Pound per Foot Hour" is an Imperial unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(lb/(ft-hr)\).
0.0004133788732137649
\(lb/(ft-hr)\)
[lb_av].[ft_i]-1.h-1
Pound per Foot Hour
"Pound per Foot Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(lb/(ft-s)\).
1.4881639435695537
\(lb/(ft-s)\)
[lb_av].[ft_i]-1.s-1
Pound per Foot Second
4.882428
0112/2///62720#UAB262
unit for areal-related mass as a unit pound according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the power of the unit foot according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units by exponent 2
[lb_av].[ft_i]-2
FP
Pound Mass (avoirdupois) Per Square Foot
"Pound per Cubic Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(lb/ft^{3}\).
16.018463373960138
\(lb/ft^{3}\)
[lb_av].[cft_i]-1
Pound per Cubic Foot
"Pound per Gallon" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(lb/gal\).
99.7763727
\(lb/gal\)
[lb_av].[gal_br]-1
Pound per Gallon
99.77637
0112/2///62720#UAA679
unit of the mass avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the unit gallon (UK) according to the Imperial system of units
[lb_av].[gal_br]-1
K71
Pound (avoirdupois) Per Gallon (UK)
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAA680
unit of the mass avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system divided by the unit gallon (US, liq.) according to the Anglo-American system of units
[lb_av].[gal_us]-1
GE
Pound (avoirdupois) Per Gallon (US)
Pound per hour is a mass flow unit. It is abbreviated as PPH or more conventionally as lb/h. Fuel flow for engines is usually expressed using this unit, it is particularly useful when dealing with gases or liquids as volume flow varies more with temperature and pressure. \(1 lb/h = 0.4535927 kg/h = 126.00 mg/s\). Minimum fuel intake on a jumbojet can be as low as 150 lb/h when idling, however this is not enough to sustain flight.
0.00012599788055555556
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pound_per_hour
\(PPH\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_per_hour?oldid=328571072
[lb_av].h-1
Pound per Hour
"Pound per Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Length' expressed as \(lb/in\).
17.857967322834646
\(lb/in\)
[lb_av].[in_i]-1
Pound per Inch
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAB137
unit of the areal-related mass as avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units related to the area square inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units
[lb_av].[sin_i]-1
80
Pound (avoirdupois) Per Square Inch
"Pound per Cubic Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(lb/in^{3}\).
27679.904710203125
\(lb/in^{3}\)
[lb_av].[cin_i]-1
Pound per Cubic Inch
"Pound per Cubic Meter" is a unit for 'Density' expressed as \(lb/m^{3}\).
0.45359237
\(lb/m^{3}\)
[lb_av].m-3
Pound per Cubic Meter
Pound per Cubic Metre
"Pound per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Time' expressed as \(lb/min\).
0.007559872833333333
\(lb/min\)
[lb_av].min-1
Pound per Minute
0.4535924
0112/2///62720#UAA692
unit of the mass avoirdupois pound according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the SI base unit for time second
[lb_av].s-1
K81
Pound (avoirdupois) Per Second
"Pound per Cubic Yard" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(lb/yd^{3}\).
0.5932764212577829
\(lb/yd^{3}\)
[lb_av].[cyd_i]-1
Pound per Cubic Yard
"Pound Force" is an Imperial unit for 'Force' expressed as \(lbf\).
4.448222
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pound-force
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound-force?oldid=453191483
lbf
[lbf_av]
Pound Force
"Pound Force Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Torque' expressed as \(lbf-ft\).
1.35581807
\(lbf-ft\)
[lbf_av].[ft_i]
Pound Force Foot
"Pound Force Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Torque' expressed as \(lbf-in\).
0.112984839
\(lbf-in\)
[lbf_av].[in_i]
Pound Force Inch
"Pound Force per Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Force Per Length' expressed as \(lbf/ft\).
14.5939042
\(lbf/ft\)
[lbf_av].[ft_i]-1
Pound Force per Foot
Pounds or Pounds Force per Square Foot is a British (Imperial) and American pressure unit which is directly related to the psi pressure unit by a factor of 144 (1 sq ft = 12 in x 12 in = 144 sq in). 1 Pound per Square Foot equals 47.8803 Pascals. The psf pressure unit is mostly for lower pressure applications such as specifying building structures to withstand a certain wind force or rating a building floor for maximum weight load.
47.8802631
\(lbf/ft^{2}\)
[lbf_av].[sft_i]-1
Pound Force per Square Foot
"Pound Force per Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Force Per Length' expressed as \(lbf/in\).
175.12685
\(lbf/in\)
[lbf_av].[in_i]-1
Pound Force per Inch
"Pound Force per Square Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(psia\).
6894.75789
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pounds_per_square_inch
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pounds_per_square_inch?oldid=485678341
psia
[lbf_av].[sin_i]-1
Pound Force per Square Inch
12410.56
0112/2///62720#UAA702
composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) divided by the unit degree Fahrenheit for temperature
[lbf_av].[sin_i]-1.[degF]-1
K86
Pound Force Per Square Inch Degree Fahrenheit
"Pound Force per Square Inch Second" is a unit for 'Force Per Area Time' expressed as \(lbf / in^{2}-s\).
6894.75789
\(lbf / in^{2}-s\)
[lbf_av].[sin_i]-1.s-1
Pound Force per Square Inch Second
"Pound Force per Pound" is an Imperial unit for 'Thrust To Mass Ratio' expressed as \(lbf/lb\).
9.80665085
\(lbf/lb\)
[lbf_av].[lb_av]-1
Pound Force per Pound
"Pound Force Second per Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(lbf-s/ft^{2}\).
47.8802631
\(lbf-s/ft^2\)
[lbf_av].s.[sft_i]-1
Pound Force Second per Square Foot
"Pound Force Second per Square Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(lbf-s/in^{2}\).
6894.75789
\(lbf-s/in^{2}\)
[lbf_av].s.[sin_i]-1
Pound Force Second per Square Inch
An obsolete unit of mass; the Troy Pound has been defined as exactly 5760 grains, or 0.3732417216 kg. A Troy Ounce is 1/12th of a Troy Pound.
0.3732417216
lbt
[lb_tr]
Pound Troy
The SI unit for measuring the flux of light being produced by a light source or received by a surface. The intensity of a light source is measured in candelas. One lumen represents the total flux of light emitted, equal to the intensity in candelas multiplied by the solid angle in steradians into which the light is emitted. A full sphere has a solid angle of \(4\cdot\pi\) steradians. A light source that uniformly radiates one candela in all directions has a total luminous flux of \(1 cd\cdot 4 \pi sr = 4 \pi cd \cdot sr \approx 12.57 \; \text{lumens}\). "Lumen" is a Latin word for light.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lumen
0112/2///62720#UAA718
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumen?oldid=492885414
cd.sr
lm
lm
LUM
lumen
A measurement of luminous efficacy, which is the light output in lumens using one watt of electricity.
1.0
\(lm-per-w\)
0112/2///62720#UAA719
lm.W-1
B61
Lumen per Watt
In photometry, the lumen second is the SI derived unit of luminous energy. It is based on the lumen, the SI unit of luminous flux, and the second, the SI base unit of time. The lumen second is sometimes called the talbot (symbol T). An older name for the lumen second was the lumberg.
\(lm s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA722
lm.s-1
B62
lumen second
lumberg
talbot
The SI unit for measuring the illumination (illuminance) of a surface. One lux is defined as an illumination of one lumen per square meter or 0.0001 phot. In considering the various light units, it's useful to think about light originating at a point and shining upon a surface. The intensity of the light source is measured in candelas; the total light flux in transit is measured in lumens (1 lumen = 1 candelau00b7steradian); and the amount of light received per unit of surface area is measured in lux (1 lux = 1 lumen/square meter). One lux is equal to approximately 0.09290 foot candle.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lux
0112/2///62720#UAA723
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lux?oldid=494700274
lm/m^2
lx
lx
LUX
Lux
The SI unit for measuring the illumination (illuminance) of a surface. One lux is defined as an illumination of one lumen per square meter or 0.0001 phot. In considering the various light units, it's useful to think about light originating at a point and shining upon a surface. The intensity of the light source is measured in candelas; the total light flux in transit is measured in lumens (1 lumen = 1 candelau00b7steradian); and the amount of light received per unit of surface area is measured in lux (1 lux = 1 lumen/square meter). One lux is equal to approximately 0.09290 foot candle.
3600.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lux
\(lx hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAA724
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lux?oldid=494700274
lm-hr/m^2
lx.h
B63
Lux Hour
A unit of length defining the distance, in meters, that light travels in a vacuum in one year.
9460730472580800.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Light-year
0112/2///62720#UAB069
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-year?oldid=495083584
ly
[ly]
B57
Light Year
Laos
0
₭
Lao kip
Georgia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lari
\(GEL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lari?oldid=486808394
Lari
Latvia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Latvian_lats
\(LVL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latvian_lats?oldid=492800402
Latvian Lats
Lebanon
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lebanese_pound
\(LBP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebanese_pound?oldid=495528740
Lebanese Pound
Albania
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lek
\(ALL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lek?oldid=495195665
Lek
Honduras
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lempira
\(HNL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lempira?oldid=389955747
Lempira
Sierra Leone
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sierra_Leonean_leone
\(SLL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra_Leonean_leone?oldid=493517965
Leone
Liberia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Liberian_dollar
\(LRD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberian_dollar?oldid=489549110
Liberian Dollar
Libya
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Libyan_dinar
\(LYD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_dinar?oldid=491421981
Libyan Dinar
Swaziland
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Swazi_lilangeni
\(SZL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swazi_lilangeni?oldid=490323340
Lilangeni
Lithuania
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lithuanian_litas
\(LTL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithuanian_litas?oldid=493046592
Lithuanian Litas
Lesotho
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Loti
\(LSL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loti?oldid=384534708
Loti
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Moon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon?oldid=494566371
Lunar mass
The metric and SI base unit of distance. The 17th General Conference on Weights and Measures in 1983 defined the meter as that distance that makes the speed of light in a vacuum equal to exactly 299 792 458 meters per second. The speed of light in a vacuum, \(c\), is one of the fundamental constants of nature. The meter is equal to approximately 1.093 613 3 yards, 3.280 840 feet, or 39.370 079 inches.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Metre
0112/2///62720#UAA726
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metre?oldid=495145797
The metric and SI base unit of distance. The meter is equal to approximately 1.093 613 3 yards, 3.280 840 feet, or 39.370 079 inches.
m
m
MTR
Meter
Metre
\(\textbf{Meter Kelvin} is a unit for 'Length Temperature' expressed as \(m K\).
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB170
m K
m.K
D18
Meter Kelvin
Metre Kelvin
\(\textbf{Meter Kelvin per Watt} is a unit for 'Thermal Resistivity' expressed as \(K-m/W\).
1.0
\(K-m/W\)
m.K.W-1
Meter Kelvin per Watt
Metre Kelvin per Watt
1.0
\(m-kg\)
m.kg
Meter Kilogram
Metre Kilogram
1.0
\(m-per-f\)
m.F-1
Meter per Farad
Metre per Farad
Metre per hour is a metric unit of both speed (scalar) and velocity (Vector (geometry)). Its symbol is m/h or mu00b7h-1 (not to be confused with the imperial unit symbol mph. By definition, an object travelling at a speed of 1 m/h for an hour would move 1 metre.
0.000277777778
\(m/h\)
0112/2///62720#UAB328
m.h-1
m/h
Meter per Hour
Metre per Hour
1.0
\(m-per-k\)
0112/2///62720#UAA728
m/K
F52
Meter per Kelvin
Metre per Kelvin
Meter Per Minute (m/min) is a unit in the category of Velocity. It is also known as meter/minute, meters per minute, metre per minute, metres per minute. Meter Per Minute (m/min) has a dimension of LT-1 where L is length, and T is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit m/s by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.016666666666
0.0166666667
\(m/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAA732
m.min-1
m/min
2X
Meter per Minute
Metre per Minute
Metre per second is an SI derived unit of both speed (scalar) and velocity (vector quantity which specifies both magnitude and a specific direction), defined by distance in metres divided by time in seconds.
The official SI symbolic abbreviation is mu00b7s-1, or equivalently either m/s.
1.0
\(m/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA733
m.s-1
m/s
MTS
Meter per Second
Metre per Second
The \(\textit{meter per Square second}\) is the unit of acceleration in the International System of Units (SI). As a derived unit it is composed from the SI base units of length, the metre, and the standard unit of time, the second. Its symbol is written in several forms as \(m/s^2\), or \(m s^{-2}\). As acceleration, the unit is interpreted physically as change in velocity or speed per time interval, that is, \(\textit{metre per second per second}\).
1.0
\(m/s^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA736
m.s-2
m/s2
MSK
Meter per Square Second
Metre per Square Second
A rate of change of SI standard unit length over a period of an average calendar year (365.25 days).
0.0000000316880878140289
m.a-1
Metres per year
The S I unit of area is the square metre.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Square_metre
\(sq-m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA744
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_metre?oldid=490945508
m2
MTK
Square Meter
Square Metre
0.859845
0112/2///62720#UAA749
product of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2, of the unit hour for time and the unit degree Celsius for temperature divided by the 1000-fold of the out of use unit for energy international calorie
m2.h.Cel/kcal_IT
L14
Square Meter Hour Degree Celsius Per Kilocalorie (international Table)
Square Metre Hour Degree Celsius Per Kilocalorie (international Table)
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz
Square metres Hertz
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz2
Square Metres square Hertz
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz3
Square metres cubic Hertz
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz4
Square metres Hertz^4
\(\textbf{Square Meter Kelvin} is a unit for 'Area Temperature' expressed as \(m^{2}-K\).
1.0
\(m^{2}-K\)
m2.K
Square Meter Kelvin
Square Metre Kelvin
\(\textbf{Square Meter Kelvin per Watt} is a unit for 'Thermal Insulance' expressed as \((K^{2})m/W\).
1.0
\((K^{2})m/W\)
0112/2///62720#UAA746
http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB9.html
m2.K.W-1
D19
Square Meter Kelvin per Watt
Square Metre Kelvin per Watt
Unavailable
1000.0
m2.g-1
Square metres per gram
Unavailable
1000.0
m2.g-1{dry}
Square metres per gram of dry sediment
0.0001
Square metres per hectare.
m^2/ha
m2.har-1
square meters per hectare
square metres per hectare
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz-1
Square metres per Hertz
Unavailable
57.2957795130823
m2.Hz-1.deg-1
Square metres per Hertz per degree
Unavailable
1.0
m2.Hz-2
Square metres per square Hertz
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
\(m^2/j\)
0112/2///62720#UAA745
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.J-1
D20
Square Meter per Joule
Square Metre per Joule
1.0
\(m2-per-k\)
m2.K-1
Square Meter per Kelvin
Square Metre per Kelvin
Square Meter Per Kilogram (m2/kg) is a unit in the category of Specific Area. It is also known as square meters per kilogram, square metre per kilogram, square metres per kilogram, square meter/kilogram, square metre/kilogram. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Square Meter Per Kilogram (m2/kg) has a dimension of M-1L2 where M is mass, and L is length. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(m^2/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAA750
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.kg-1
D21
Square Meter per Kilogram
Square Metre per Kilogram
Square Meter Per Mole (m2/mol) is a unit in the category of Specific Area. It is also known as square meters per mole, square metre per per, square metres per per, square meter/per, square metre/per. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Square Meter Per Mole (m2/mol) has a dimension of M-1L2 where M is mass, and L is length. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(m^2/mol\)
\(m^{2}/mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAA751
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.mol-1
D22
Square Meter per Mole
Square Metre per Mole
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB492
power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2 divided by the derived SI unit newton
m2.N-1
H59
Square Meter Per Newton
Square Metre Per Newton
\(Square Metres per second is the SI derived unit of angular momentum, defined by distance or displacement in metres multiplied by distance again in metres and divided by time in seconds. The unit is written in symbols as m2/s or m2u00b7s-1 or m2s-1. It may be better understood when phrased as "metres per second times metres", i.e. the momentum of an object with respect to a position.\)
1.0
\(m^{2} s^{-1}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA752
m2.s-1
m2/s
S4
Square Meter per Second
Square Metre per Second
Unavailable
1.0
m2.s-2
Square metres per square second
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
\(m^2/sr\)
0112/2///62720#UAA986
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steradian?oldid=494317847
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.sr-1
D27
Square Meter per Steradian
Square Metre per Steradian
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
\(m^2/sr-j\)
0112/2///62720#UAA756
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.sr-1.J-1
D25
Square Meter per Steradian Joule
Square Metre per Steradian Joule
1.0
\(m^2/v-s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA748
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m2.V-1.s-1
D26
Square Meter per Volt Second
Square Metre per Volt Second
Unavailable
1.0
m2.s.rad-1
Square metre seconds per radian
"Square Meter Steradian" is a unit for 'Area Angle' expressed as \(m^{2}-sr\).
1.0
\(m^{2}-sr\)
m2.sr
Square Meter Steradian
Square Metre Steradian
The SI unit of volume, equal to 1.0e6 cm3, 1000 liters, 35.3147 ft3, or 1.30795 yd3. A cubic meter holds about 264.17 U.S. liquid gallons or 219.99 British Imperial gallons.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cubic_metre
\(m^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA757
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_metre?oldid=490956678
m3
MTQ
Cubic Meter
Cubic Metre
\(m^3/c\)
0112/2///62720#UAB143
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
m3.C-1
A38
Cubic Meter per Coulomb
Cubic Metre per Coulomb
0.00001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA760
power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit day
m3.d-1
G52
Cubic Meter Per Day
Cubic Metre Per Day
Cubic Meter Per Hour (m3/h) is a unit in the category of Volume flow rate. It is also known as cubic meters per hour, cubic metre per hour, cubic metres per hour, cubic meter/hour, cubic metre/hour, cubic meter/hr, cubic metre/hr, flowrate. Cubic Meter Per Hour (m3/h) has a dimension of L3T-1 where L is length, and T is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit m3/s by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.00027777777.
0.0002777777777777778
\(m^{3}/h\)
0112/2///62720#UAA763
m3.h-1
m3/h
MQH
Cubic Meter per Hour
Cubic Metre per Hour
1.0
\(m3-per-k\)
0112/2///62720#UAA758
m3.K-1
G29
Cubic Meter per Kelvin
Cubic Metre per Kelvin
Cubic Meter Per Kilogram (m3/kg) is a unit in the category of Specific volume. It is also known as cubic meters per kilogram, cubic metre per kilogram, cubic metres per kilogram, cubic meter/kilogram, cubic metre/kilogram. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Cubic Meter Per Kilogram (m3/kg) has a dimension of M-1L3 where M is mass, and L is length. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(m^{3}/kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAA766
m3.kg-1
m3/kg
A39
Cubic Meter per Kilogram
Cubic Metre per Kilogram
1.0
\(m^{3} kg^{-1} s^{-2}\)
m3.(kg.s2)-1
m3.kg-1.s-2
m3/(kg.s2)
Cubic Meter per Kilogram Square Second
Cubic Metre per Kilogram Square Second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA767
power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
m3.m-3
H60
Cubic Meter Per Cubic Meter
Cubic Metre Per Cubic Metre
0.01666667
0112/2///62720#UAA768
power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the unit minute
m3.min-1
G53
Cubic Meter Per Minute
Cubic Metre Per Minute
<p>The molar volume, symbol \(Vm\), is the volume occupied by one mole of a substance (chemical element or chemical compound) at a given temperature and pressure. It is equal to the molar mass (M) divided by the mass density. It has the SI unit cubic metres per mole \(m3/mol\), although it is more practical to use the units cubic decimetres per mole \(dm3/mol\) for gases and cubic centimetres per mole \(cm3/mol\) for liquids and solids</p>.
1.0
\(m^{3} mol^{-1}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA771
m3.mol-1
m3/mol
A40
Cubic Meter per Mole
Cubic Metre per Mole
A cubic metre per second (\(m^{3}s^{-1}, m^{3}/s\)), cumecs or cubic meter per second in American English) is a derived SI unit of flow rate equal to that of a stere or cube with sides of one metre ( u0303 39.37 in) in length exchanged or moving each second. It is popularly used for water flow, especially in rivers and streams, and fractions for HVAC values measuring air flow.
1.0
\(m^{3}/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA772
m3.s-1
m3/s
MQS
Cubic Meter per Second
Cubic Metre per Second
\(\textit{Cubic Meter per Square Second}\) is a C.G.S System unit for \(\textit{Standard Gravitational Parameter}\) expressed as \(m^3/s^2\)
1.0
\(m^3/s^2\)
m3.s-2
m3/s2
Cubic Meter per Square Second
Cubic Metre per Square Second
A unit associated with area moments of inertia.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Quartic_metre
\(m^{4}\)
m4
Quartic Meter
Quartic Metre
Unavailable
1.0
m4.s-1
Metres to the power four per second
"Mach" is a unit for 'Dimensionless Ratio' expressed as \(mach\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mach
0112/2///62720#UAB595
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mach?oldid=492058934
Mach
\(\(M\$/Flight\)\)
Million US Dollars per Flight
"Mho" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Electric Conductivity' expressed as \(mho\).
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Siemens_%28unit%29
0112/2///62720#UAB200
http://www.simetric.co.uk/siderived.htm
℧
mho
NQ
Mho
"StatMHO" is the unit of conductance, admittance, and susceptance in the C.G.S e.s.u system of units. One \(statmho\) is the conductance between two points in a conductor when a constant potential difference of \(1 \; statvolt\) applied between the points produces in the conductor a current of \(1 \; statampere\), the conductor not being the source of any electromotive force, approximately \(1.1126 \times 10^{-12} mho\).
0.0000000000011126
http://www.sizes.com/units/statmho.htm
stat℧
Statmho
The exact length of the land mile varied slightly among English-speaking countries until the international yard and pound agreement in 1959 established the yard as exactly 0.9144 metres, giving a mile of exactly 1,609.344 metres. The United States adopted this international mile for most purposes, but retained the pre-1959 mile for some land-survey data, terming it the US survey mile. In the US, statute mile formally refers to the survey mile, about 3.219 mm (1/8 inch) longer than the international mile (the international mile is exactly 0.0002% less than the US survey mile).
1609.344
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile
mi
[mi_i]
International Mile
Miles per hour is an imperial unit of speed expressing the number of statute miles covered in one hour. It is currently the standard unit used for speed limits, and to express speeds generally, on roads in the United Kingdom and the United States. A common abbreviation is mph or MPH.
0.44704
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Miles_per_hour
\(mi/hr\)
0112/2///62720#UAB111
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miles_per_hour?oldid=482840548
[mi_i].h-1
[mi_i]/h
HM
Mile per Hour
Miles per minute is an imperial unit of speed expressing the number of statute miles covered in one minute.
26.8224
\(mi/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAB229
[mi_i].min-1
[mi_i]/min
Mile per Minute
The square mile (abbreviated as sq mi and sometimes as mi) is an imperial and US unit of measure for an area equal to the area of a square of one statute mile. It should not be confused with miles square, which refers to the number of miles on each side squared. For instance, 20 miles square (20 × 20 miles) is equal to 400 square miles. One square mile is equivalent to: 4,014,489,600 square inches 27,878,400 square feet, 3,097,600 square yards, 640 acres, 258.9988110336 hectares, 2560 roods, 25,899,881,103.36 square centimetres, 2,589,988.110336 square metres, 2.589988110336 square kilometres When applied to a portion of the earth's surface, which is curved rather than flat, 'square mile' is an informal synonym for section.
2589988.11
\(square-mile\)
0112/2///62720#UAB050
[mi_i]2
[mi_us]2
[smi_us]
MIK
Square Mile
A cubic mile is an imperial / U.S. customary unit of volume, used in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. It is defined as the volume of a cube with sides of 1 mile in length.
4168181830.0
\(mi^{3}\)
[mi_i]3
Cubic Mile
The Mil unit of plane angle, as defined by NATO to be 1/6400 of a circle.
0.000490873852
Mil Angle (NATO)
A circular mil is a unit of area, equal to the area of a circle with a diameter of one mil (one thousandth of an inch). It is a convenient unit for referring to the area of a wire with a circular cross section, because the area in circular mils can be calculated without reference to pi (\(\pi\)). The area in circular mils, A, of a circle with a diameter of d mils, is given by the formula: Electricians in Canada and the United States are familiar with the circular mil because the National Electrical Code (NEC) uses the circular mil to define wire sizes larger than 0000 AWG. In many NEC publications and uses, large wires may be expressed in thousands of circular mils, which is abbreviated in two different ways: MCM or kcmil. For example, one common wire size used in the NEC has a cross-section of 250,000 circular mils, written as 250 kcmil or 250 MCM, which is the first size larger than 0000 AWG used within the NEC.
0112/2///62720#UAB207
cmil
[cml_i]
Circular Mil
A minute is a unit of measurement of time. The minute is a unit of time equal to 1/60 (the first sexagesimal fraction of an hour or 60 seconds. In the UTC time scale, a minute on rare occasions has 59 or 61 seconds; see leap second. The minute is not an SI unit; however, it is accepted for use with SI units. The SI symbol for minute or minutes is min (for time measurement) or the prime symbol after a number, e.g. 5' (for angle measurement, even if it is informally used for time).
60.0
0112/2///62720#UAA842
min
min
MIN
Minute
0.0002908882
0112/2///62720#UAA097
'
'
D61
Minute Angle
Sidereal time is a time-keeping system astronomers use to keep track of the direction to point their telescopes to view a given star in the night sky. A mean sidereal day is about \(23 h 56 m 4.1 s\) in length. However, due to variations in the rotation rate of the Earth, the rate of an ideal sidereal clock deviates from any simple multiple of a civil clock. In practice, the difference is kept track of by the difference UTC-UT1, which is measured by radio telescopes and kept on file and available to the public at the IERS and at the United States Naval Observatory. A Sidereal Minute is \(1/60^{th}\) of a Sidereal Hour, which is \(1/24^{th}\) of a Sidereal Day.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_time
min
min
Sidereal Minute
A unit of distance used primarily at sea and in aviation. The nautical mile is defined to be the average distance on the Earth's surface represented by one minute of latitude. In 1929 an international conference in Monaco redefined the nautical mile to be exactly 1852 meters or 6076.115 49 feet, a distance known as the international nautical mile. The international nautical mile equals about 1.1508 statute miles. There are usually 3 nautical miles in a league. The unit is designed to equal 1/60 degree, although actual degrees of latitude vary from about 59.7 to 60.3 nautical miles. (Note: using data from the Geodetic Reference System 1980, the "true" length of a nautical mile would be 1852.216 meters.)
1852.0
0112/2///62720#UAB065
n mile
[nmi_i]
NMI
Nautical Mile
The knot is a unit of speed equal to one nautical mile (1.852 km) per hour, approximately 1.151 mph. The abbreviation kn is preferred by the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO), which includes every major seafaring nation; but the abbreviations kt (singular) and kts (plural) are also widely used conflicting with the SI symbol for kilotonne which is also "kt". The knot is a non-SI unit accepted for use with the International System of Units (SI). Worldwide, the knot is used in meteorology, and in maritime and air navigation-for example, a vessel travelling at 1 knot along a meridian travels one minute of geographic latitude in one hour.
\(nmi/hr\)
[nmi_i].h-1
[nmi_i]/h
Nautical Mile per Hour
The SI derived unit for speed is the meter/second.
1 meter/second is equal to 0.0323974082073 nautical mile per minute.
\(nmi/min\)
[nmi_i].min-1
[nmi_i]/min
Nautical Mile per Minute
The exact length of the land mile varied slightly among English-speaking countries until the international yard and pound agreement in 1959 established the yard as exactly 0.9144 metres, giving a mile of exactly 1,609.344 metres. The United States adopted this international mile for most purposes, but retained the pre-1959 mile for some land-survey data, terming it the US survey mile. In the US, statute mile formally refers to the survey mile, about 3.219 mm (1/8 inch) longer than the international mile (the international mile is exactly 0.0002\% less than the US survey mile).
1609.347
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile
mi
[mi_us]
Mile US Statute
A unit of time corresponding approximately to one cycle of the moon's phases, or about 30 days or 4 weeks. Also known as the 'Synodic Month' and calculated as 29.53059 days.
2551442.976
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Month
0112/2///62720#UAA880
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Synodal+month
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Month
mo
mo
MON
Month
A unit of mechanical mobility for sound waves, being the reciprocal of the mechanical ohm unit of impedance, i.e., for an acoustic medium, the ratio of the flux or volumic speed (area times particle speed) of the resulting waves through it to the effective sound pressure (i.e. force) causing them, the unit being qualified, according to the units used, as m.k.s. or c.g.s. The mechanical ohm is equivalent to \(1\,dyn\cdot\,s\cdot cm^{-1}\) or \(10^{-3} N\cdot s\cdot m^{-1}\).
1000.0
\(mohm\)
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-914
\(1\:{mohm_{cgs}} = 1\:\frac {cm} {dyn.s}\: (=\:1\:\frac s g \:in\:base\:c.g.s.\:terms)\)
\(1\:{mohm_{mks}} = 10^{3}\:\frac m {N.s}\:(=\:10^{3}\: \frac s {kg}\:in\:base\:m.k.s.\:terms)\)
Mohm
The mole is a unit of measurement used in chemistry to express amounts of a chemical substance. The official definition, adopted as part of the SI system in 1971, is that one mole of a substance contains just as many elementary entities (atoms, molecules, ions, or other kinds of particles) as there are atoms in 12 grams of carbon-12 (carbon-12 is the most common atomic form of carbon, consisting of atoms having 6 protons and 6 neutrons). This corresponds to a value of \(6.02214179(30) \times 1023\) elementary entities of the substance. It is one of the base units in the International System of Units, and has the unit symbol \(mol\). A Mole is the SI base unit of the amount of a substance (as distinct from its mass or weight). Moles measure the actual number of atoms or molecules in an object. An earlier name is gram molecular weight, because one mole of a chemical compound is the same number of grams as the molecular weight of a molecule of that compound measured in atomic mass units.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mole_%28unit%29
0112/2///62720#UAA882
0112/2///62720#UAD716
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(unit)
mol
mol
C34
Mole
\(\textbf{Mole Degree Celsius} is a C.G.S System unit for 'Temperature Amount Of Substance' expressed as \(mol-degC\).
\(mol-deg-c\)
\(mol-degC\)
mol.Cel
Mole Degree Celsius
<p><strong>Mole Kelvin</strong> is a unit for \textit{'Temperature Amount Of Substance'} expressed as \(mol-K\)</p>.
1.0
mol-K
mol.K
Mole Kelvin
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA883
SI base unit mol divided by the 0.001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mol.dm-3
C35
Mole Per Cubic Decimeter
Mole Per Cubic Decimetre
SI unit of the quantity of matter per SI unit of mass per unit of time expressed in hour.
0.277777777777778
mol.g-1.h-1
Moles per gram per hour
0.000277778
0112/2///62720#UAA884
SI base unit mole divided by the unit for time hour
mol.h-1
L23
Mole Per Hour
\(TBD\)
1.0
\(mol/kg\)
mol.kg-1
mol/kg
Mol per Kilogram
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA888
SI base unit mol divided by the unit litre
mol.L-1
mol/L
C38
Mole Per Liter
Mole Per Litre
SI unit of quantity of matter per SI unit area.
1.0
mol.m-2
Moles per square metre
quantity of matter per unit area per unit of time.
0.0000115740740740741
mol.m-2.d-1
Moles per square metre per day
SI unit of quantity of matter per SI unit area per SI unit of time.
1.0
mol.m-2.s-1
Moles per square metre per second
Unavailable
1.0
mol.m-2.s-1.m-1
Moles per square metre per second per metre
Unavailable
1.0
mol.m-2.s-1.m-1.sr-1
Moles per square metre per second per metre per steradian
Unavailable
1.0
mol.m-2.s-1.sr-1
Moles per square metre per second per steradian
The SI derived unit for amount-of-substance concentration is the mole/cubic meter.
1.0
\(mol/m^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA891
mol.m-3
mol/m3
C36
Mole per Cubic Meter
Mole per Cubic Metre
SI unit of quantity of matter per SI unit volume per SI unit of time.
1.0
mol.m-3.s-1
Moles per cubic metre per second
0.016666667
0112/2///62720#UAA894
SI base unit mole divided by the unit for time minute
mol.min-1
L30
Mole Per Minute
Unavailable.
1.0
mol.mol-1
Moles per mole
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA895
SI base unit mol divided by the SI base unit second
mol.s-1
mol/s
E95
Mole Per Second
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#iso1000
mo_g
Mean Gregorian Month
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#iso1000
mo_j
Mean Julian Month
A unit of time corresponding approximately to one cycle of the moon's phases, or about 30 days or 4 weeks and calculated as 29.53059 days.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Synodal+month
mo_s
Synodic month
"Maxwell" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Magnetic Flux' expressed as \(Mx\).
0.00000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Maxwell
0112/2///62720#UAB155
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell?oldid=478391976
Mx
Mx
B65
Maxwell
Madagascar
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Malagasy_ariary
\(MGA\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malagasy_ariary?oldid=489551279
Malagasy Ariary
Malawi
2
\(MWK\)
Malawi Kwacha
Malaysia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Malaysian_ringgit
\(MYR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian_ringgit?oldid=494417091
Malaysian Ringgit
Malta
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Maltese_lira
\(MTL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maltese_lira?oldid=493810797
Maltese Lira
Turkmenistan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Manat
\(TMM\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manat?oldid=486967490
Manat
Mauritius
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mauritian_rupee
\(MUR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauritian_rupee?oldid=487629200
Mauritius Rupee
The mebibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information equivalent to \(1024^{2} bytes\) or \(2^{20} bytes\).
5814539.984022601702139868711921
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
MiB
Mebibyte
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA202
1 000 000-fold of the SI base unit ampere
MA
H38
Megaampere
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA203
1 000 000-fold of the SI base unit ampere divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
MA.m-2
B66
Megaampere Per Square Meter
Megaampere Per Square Metre
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to 100,000 Pa. It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000 Pa = 1 bar \approx 750.0616827 Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
100000000000.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
Mbar
Mbar
Megabar
A megabit per second (Mbit/s or Mb/s; not to be confused with mbit/s which means millibit per second, or with Mbitps which means megabit picosecond) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1,000,000 bits per second or 1,000 kilobits per second or 125,000 bytes per second or 125 kilobytes per second.
0112/2///62720#UAA226
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_rate_units
mbps
MBd
Mbit/s
E20
Megabit per Second
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA205
1 000 000-fold of the derived unit becquerel
MBq
4N
Megabecquerel
The megabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information equivalent to \(2^{6} bytes\). Although the prefix mega means \(10^{6}\), the term megabyte and symbol \(mB\) have historically been used to refer to \(1024^{2} bytes\) or \(2^{20} bytes\). The megabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information storage or transmission with three different values depending on context: 1048576 bytes generally for computer memory; and one million bytes (10, see prefix mega-) generally for computer storage. In rare cases, it is used to mean \(1000 \times 1024 (1024,000) bytes\). The IEEE Standards Board has confirmed that mega means \(1000,000\), with exceptions allowed for the base-two meaning.
5814539.984022601702139868711921
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Megabyte
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megabyte?oldid=487094486
MB
MBy
Mega byte
A MegaCoulomb is \(10^{6} C\).
1.06
0112/2///62720#UAA206
MC
MC
D77
MegaCoulomb
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA207
1 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
MC.m-2
B70
Megacoulomb Per Square Meter
Megacoulomb Per Square Metre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA208
1 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
MC.m-3
B69
Megacoulomb Per Cubic Meter
Megacoulomb Per Cubic Metre
\(\textbf{Mega Electron Volt} is a unit for 'Energy And Work' expressed as \(MeV\).
0.00000000000016021765314
MeV
MeV
Mega Electron Volt
\(\textbf{Mega Electron Volt Femtometer} is a unit for 'Length Energy' expressed as \(MeV fm\).
0.000000000000000000000000000160217653
MeV fm
MeV.fm
Mega Electron Volt Femtometer
Mega Electron Volt Femtometre
"Mega Electron Volt per Centimeter" is a unit for 'Linear Energy Transfer' expressed as \(MeV/cm\).
0.000000000016021765314
\(MeV/cm\)
MeV.cm-1
Mega Electron Volt per Centimeter
Mega Electron Volt per Centimetre
"Mega Electron Volt per Speed of Light" is a unit for 'Linear Momentum' expressed as \(MeV/c\).
\(MeV/c\)
MeV.[c]-1
Mega Electron Volt per Speed of Light
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA228
1 000-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
Mg
2U
Megagram
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA229
1 000-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
Mg.m-3
B72
Megagram Per Cubic Meter
Megagram Per Cubic Metre
"Megahertz" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Frequency' expressed as \(MHz\).
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA209
MHz
MHz
MHZ
Megahertz
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA210
product of the 1 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit hertz and the 1 000-fold of the SI base unit metre
MHz.m
H39
Megahertz Meter
Megahertz Metre
\(\textbf{Mega Hertz per Kelvin} is a unit for 'Inverse Time Temperature' expressed as \(MHz K^{-1}\).
1000000.0
\(MHz K^{-1}\)
MHz.K-1
Mega Hertz per Kelvin
"Mega Hertz per Tesla" is a unit for 'Electric Charge Per Mass' expressed as \(MHz T^{-1}\).
1000000.0
\(MHz T^{-1}\)
MHz.T-1
Mega Hertz per Tesla
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA211
1,000,000-fold of the derived unit joule
MJ
3B
Megajoule
MegaJoule Per Kelvin (MegaJ/K) is a unit in the category of Entropy.
1000000.0
\(MegaJ/K\)
MJ.K-1
MegaJoule per Kelvin
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB093
1,000,000-fold of the derived SI unit joule divided by the SI base unit kilogram
MJ.kg-1
JK
Megajoule Per Kilogram
MegaJoule Per Square Meter (\(MegaJ/m^2\)) is a unit in the category of Energy density.
1000000.0
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
MJ.m-2
Megajoule Per Square Meter
Megajoule Per Square Metre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA212
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit joule divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
MJ.m-3
JM
Megajoule Per Cubic Meter
Megajoule Per Cubic Metre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB177
quotient of the 1,000,000-fold of the derived SI unit joule divided by the SI base unit second
MJ.s-1
D78
Megajoule Per Second
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB112
1 000 000-fold of the unit litre
ML
MAL
Megalitre
Megalitre
4448.222
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pound-force
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound-force?oldid=453191483
Mlbf
M[lbf_av]
Mega Pound Force
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA213
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit newton
MN
B73
Meganewton
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA214
1,000,000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit metre
MN.m
B74
Meganewton Meter
Meganewton Metre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA198
1,000,000-fold of the derived unit ohm
MOhm
B75
Megaohm
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA215
1,000,000-fold of the derived unit pascal
MPa
MPA
Megapascal
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA218
product out of the 1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal and the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
MPa.L.s-1
F97
Megapascal Liter Per Second
Megapascal Litre Per Second
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA219
product out of the 1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal and the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
MPa.m3.s-1
F98
Megapascal Cubic Meter Per Second
Megapascal Cubic Metre Per Second
10.0
0112/2///62720#UAA217
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the unit bar
MPa.bar-1
F05
Megapascal Per Bar
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA216
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the SI base unit kelvin
MPa.K-1
F85
Megapascal Per Kelvin
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA220
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
MS.m-1
B77
Megasiemens Per Meter
Megasiemens Per Metre
The tonne of oil equivalent (toe) is a unit of energy: the amount of energy released by burning one tonne of crude oil, approximately 42 GJ (as different crude oils have different calorific values, the exact value of the toe is defined by convention; unfortunately there are several slightly different definitions as discussed below). The toe is sometimes used for large amounts of energy, as it can be more intuitive to visualise, say, the energy released by burning 1000 tonnes of oil than 42,000 billion joules (the SI unit of energy).</p>
<p>Multiples of the toe are used, in particular the megatoe (Mtoe, one million toe) and the gigatoe (Gtoe, one billion toe).</p>
41868000000000.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonne_of_oil_equivalent
megatoe
Megaton of Oil Equivalent
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA221
1,000,000-fold of the derived unit volt
MV
B78
Megavolt
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA222
1,000,000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit volt and the SI base unit ampere
MV.A
MVA
Megavolt Ampere
3600000000.0
product of the 1,000,000-fold of the unit for apparent by ampere and the unit hour
MV.A.h
Megavolt Ampere Hour
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB199
1 000 000-fold of the unit volt ampere reactive
MV.A{reactive)
MAR
Megavolt Ampere Reactive
3600000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB198
product of the 1,000,000-fold of the unit volt ampere reactive and the unit hour
MV.A{reactive).h
MAH
Megavolt Ampere Reactive Hour
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA223
1,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit volt divided by the SI base unit metre
MV.m-1
B79
Megavolt Per Meter
Megavolt Per Metre
MW
MegaW
3600000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA225
1 000 000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit watt and the unit hour
MW.h
MWH
Megawatt Hour
31557600000000.0
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/megayear
1,000,000-fold of the derived unit year.
Myr
Ma
Million Years
Ma
Mega Year
megannum
Mozambique
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mozambican_metical
\(MZN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozambican_metical?oldid=488225670
Metical
Mexico
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mexican_peso
\(MXN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_peso?oldid=494829813
Mexican Peso
Mexico
2
\(MXV\)
Mexican Unidad de Inversion (UDI) (Funds code)
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA057
\(\mu A\)
µA
uA
B84
microampere
Unavailable
0.101325
uatm
Microatmospheres
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAB089
0.000001-fold of the unit bar
ubar
B85
Microbar
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA058
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit becquerel
uBq
H08
Microbecquerel
One radioactive disintegration per hundred thousand seconds from an SI standard unit of mass of sample.
0.000001
uBq.kg-1
Microbecquerels per kilogram
Unavailable
0.001
uBq.L-1
Microbecquerels per litre
A MicroCoulomb is \(10^{-6} C\).
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA059
μC
uC
B86
MicroCoulomb
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA060
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
uC.m-2
B88
Microcoulomb Per Square Meter
Microcoulomb Per Square Metre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA061
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
uC.m-3
B87
Microcoulomb Per Cubic Meter
Microcoulomb Per Cubic Metre
Another commonly used measure of radioactivity, the microcurie: \(1 \micro Ci = 3.7 \times 10 disintegrations per second = 2.22 \times 10 disintegrations per minute\). A radiotherapy machine may have roughly 1000 Ci of a radioisotope such as caesium-137 or cobalt-60. This quantity of radioactivity can produce serious health effects with only a few minutes of close-range, un-shielded exposure. The typical human body contains roughly \(0.1\micro Ci\) of naturally occurring potassium-40.
37000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Curie
0112/2///62720#UAA062
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curie?oldid=495080313
Ci
uCi
M5
MicroCurie
The "microfarad" (symbolized \(\mu F\)) is a unit of capacitance, equivalent to 0.000001 (10 to the -6th power) farad. The microfarad is a moderate unit of capacitance. In utility alternating-current (AC) and audio-frequency (AF) circuits, capacitors with values on the order of \(1 \mu F\) or more are common. At radio frequencies (RF), a smaller unit, the picofarad (pF), is often used.
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA063
μF
uF
4O
microfarad
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA064
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit farad divided by the 1,000-fold of the SI base unit metre
uF.km-1
H28
Microfarad Per Kilometer
Microfarad Per Kilometre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA065
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit farad divided by the SI base unit metre
uF.m-1
B89
Microfarad Per Meter
Microfarad Per Metre
"Microgravity" is a unit for 'Linear Acceleration' expressed as \(microG\).
0.00000980665
\(\mu G\)
µG
u[g]
Microgravity
A rate of change of one millionth part of a unit of gravitational acceleration equal to one centimetre per second per second over a distance of one metre.
0.00000001
uGal.m-1
MicroGals per metre
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA082
0.000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
ug
MC
Microgram
One part per 10**6 (million) by mass of the measurand in the matrix.
0.000001
ug.g-1
Micrograms per gram
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA083
mass ratio as 0.000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit kilogram
ug.kg-1
ug/kg
J33
Microgram Per Kilogram
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA084
0.000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit litre
ug.L-1
ug/L
H29
Microgram Per Liter
Microgram Per Litre
A rate of change of mass of a measurand equivalent to 10^-9 kilogram (the SI unit of mass) per litre volume of matrix over a period of 1 hour.
0.000000000277777777777778
ug.L-1.h-1
Micrograms per litre per hour
Unavailable
0.0000000000000115740740740741
ug.m-2.d-1
Micrograms per square metre per day
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA085
0.000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
ug.m-3
ug/m3
GQ
Microgram Per Cubic Meter
Microgram Per Cubic Metre
Unavailable
0.000000000000277777777777778
ug.m-3.h-1
Micrograms per cubic metre per hour
0.000001 fold of the SI unit of radiation dose. Radiation carries energy, and when it is absorbed by matter the matter receives this energy. The dose is the amount of energy deposited per unit of mass. One gray is defined to be the dose of one joule of energy absorbed per kilogram of matter, or 100 rad. The unit is named for the British physician L. Harold Gray (1905-1965), an authority on the use of radiation in the treatment of cancer.
0.000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grey
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey?oldid=494774160
J/kg
µGy
uGy
MicroGray
The SI derived unit for inductance is the henry. 1 henry is equal to 1000000 microhenry.
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA066
μH
uH
B90
Microhenry
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA068
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the 1,000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
uH.kOhm-1
G98
Microhenry Per Kiloohm
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA069
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the SI base unit metre
uH.m-1
B91
Microhenry Per Meter
Microhenry Per Metre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA067
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the SI derived unit ohm
uH.Ohm-1
G99
Microhenry Per Ohm
"Microinch" is an Imperial unit for 'Length' expressed as \(in^{-6}\).
0.0000000254
\(\mu in\)
µin
u[in_i]
Microinch
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA088
0.000001-fold of the unit litre
uL
4G
Microlitre
Microlitre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA089
volume ratio as 0.000001-fold of the unit litre divided by the unit litre
uL.L-1
uL/L
J36
Microlitre Per Liter
Microlitre Per Litre
"Micrometer" is a unit for 'Length' expressed as \(microm\).
0.000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Micrometer
0112/2///62720#UAA090
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micrometer?oldid=491270437
μm
um
4H
Micrometer
Micrometre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA091
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
um.K-1
F50
Micrometer Per Kelvin
Micrometre Per Kelvin
Unavailable
0.0000000115740740740741
um.L-1.d-1
Micromoles per litre per day
Unavailable
0.000001
um2.mL-1
Square microns per millilitre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA092
0.000000000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
um2
H30
Square Micrometer
Square Micrometre
Unavailable
0.18
um3
Cubic micrometres (microns)
Unavailable
0.18
um3.m-3
Cubic microns per cubic metre
Unavailable
0.000000000001
um3.mL-1
Cubic microns per millilitre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAB201
0.000001-fold of the obsolete unit mho of the electric conductance
umho
NR
Micromho
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA093
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit mol
umol
FH
Micromole
Unavailable
0.000001
umol.kg-1
umol/kg
Micromoles per kilogram
Unavailable
0.001
umol.L-1
umol/L
Micromoles per litre
Unavailable
0.000000277777777777778
umol.L-1.h-1
umol/L/h
Micromoles per litre per hour
One part per 10**6 (million) of the SI unit of quantity of matter (the mole) per SI unit area.
0.000001
umol.m-2
umol/m2
Micromoles per square metre
Unavailable
0.0000000000115740740740741
umol.m-2.d-1
umol/m2/d
Micromoles per square metre per day
Unavailable
0.000000000277777777777778
umol.m-2.h-1
umol/m2/h
Micromoles per square metre per hour
One part per 10**6 (million) of the SI unit of quantity of matter (the mole) per SI unit area per SI unit of time.
0.000001
umol.m-2.s-1
umol/m2/s
Micromoles per square metre per second
Unavailable
0.000001
umol.mol-1
umol/mol
Micromoles per mole
Unavailable
0.0000115740740740741
umol.umol-1.d-1
umol/umol/d
Micromole per micromole of biomass per day
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA070
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit newton
uN
B92
Micronewton
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA071
0.000001-fold of the product out of the derived SI newton and the SI base unit metre
uN.m
B93
Micronewton Meter
Micronewton Metre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA055
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
uOhm
B94
Microohm
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA073
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit pascal
uPa
B96
Micropascal
0.0000001
0112/2///62720#UAA072
0.000001-fold of the CGS unit of the dynamic viscosity poise
uP
J32
Micropoise
0.000001
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec07.html#7.10">SP811 section7.10</a></p>
0112/2///62720#UAA094
μrad
urad
B97
microradian
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA074
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit siemens
uS
B99
Microsiemens
0.0001
0112/2///62720#UAA075
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
uS.cm-1
G42
Microsiemens Per Centimeter
Microsiemens Per Centimetre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA076
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
uS.m-1
G43
Microsiemens Per Meter
Microsiemens Per Metre
"Microsecond" is a unit for 'Time' expressed as \(microsec\).
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA095
μs
us
B98
microsecond
Although the sievert has the same dimensions as the gray (i.e. joules per kilogram), it measures a different quantity. To avoid any risk of confusion between the absorbed dose and the equivalent dose, the corresponding special units, namely the gray instead of the joule per kilogram for absorbed dose and the sievert instead of the joule per kilogram for the dose equivalent, should be used. 0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit sievert.
0.000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sievert
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sievert?oldid=495474333
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1284
J/kg
µSv
uSv
MicroSievert
0.000001-fold of the derived SI unit sievert divided by the unit hour
0.000000000277778
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sievert
0112/2///62720#UAB466
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sievert?oldid=495474333
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1284
J/kg
µSv/hr
uSv.h-1
MicroSievert per hour
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA077
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit tesla
uT
D81
Microtesla
"MicroTorr" is a unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(microtorr\).
0.000133322
μTorr
uTorr
MicroTorr
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA078
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit volt
uV
D82
Microvolt
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA079
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit volt divided by the SI base unit metre
uV.m-1
C3
Microvolt Per Meter
Microvolt Per Metre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA080
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit watt
uW
D80
Microwatt
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA081
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit watt divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
uW.m-2
D85
Microwatt Per Square Meter
Microwatt Per Square Metre
"Mil Length" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Length' expressed as \(mil\).
mil
[mil_i]
Mil Length
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA775
mA
mA
4K
MilliAmpere
3.6
0112/2///62720#UAA777
product of the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit ampere and the unit hour
mA.h
E09
Milliampere Hour
0.03937008
0112/2///62720#UAA778
0.001-fold of the SI base unit ampere divided by the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units
mA.[in_i]-1
F08
Milliampere Per Inch
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA781
0.001-fold of the SI base unit ampere divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
mA.mm-1
F76
Milliampere Per Millimeter
Milliampere Per Millimetre
A minute of arc, arcminute, or minute arc (MOA), is a unit of angular measurement equal to one sixtieth (1/60) of one degree (circle/21,600), or \(\pi /10,800 radians\). In turn, a second of arc or arcsecond is one sixtieth (1/60) of one minute of arc. Since one degree is defined as one three hundred and sixtieth (1/360) of a rotation, one minute of arc is 1/21,600 of a rotation. the milliarcsecond, abbreviated mas, is used in astronomy.
0.000000290888209
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minute_of_arc
mas
m"
Milli ArcSecond
The bar is a non-SI unit of pressure, defined by the IUPAC as exactly equal to 100,000 Pa. It is about equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level, and since 1982 the IUPAC has recommended that the standard for atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to \(100,000 Pa = 1 bar \approx 750.0616827 Torr\). Units derived from the bar are the megabar (symbol: Mbar), kilobar (symbol: kbar), decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI or cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA810
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_(unit)
mbar
mbar
MBR
Millibar
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAA813
product out of the 0.001-fold of the unit bar and the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
mbar.L.s-1
F95
Millibar Liter Per Second
Millibar Litre Per Second
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA327
product of the unit bar and the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
mbar.m3.s-1
F92
Millibar Cubic Meter Per Second
Millibar Cubic Metre Per Second
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA812
0.01-fold of the unit bar divided by the unit bar
mbar.bar-1
F04
Millibar Per Bar
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA811
0.001-fold of the unit bar divided by the unit temperature kelvin
mbar.K-1
F84
Millibar Per Kelvin
One radioactive disintegration per thousand seconds per 1000th SI unit of sample mass.
1.0
mBq.g-1
Millibecquerels per gram
One radioactive disintegration per thousand seconds from an SI standard unit of mass of sample.
0.001
mBq.kg-1
Millibecquerels per kilogram
One radioactive disintegration per second from the SI unit of volume (cubic metre). Equivalent to Becquerels per cubic metre.
1.0
mBq.L-1
Millibecquerels per litre
One radioactive disintegration per thousand seconds in material passing through an area of one square metre during a period of one day (86400 seconds).
0.0000000115740740740741
mBq.m-2.d-1
Millibecquerels per square metre per day
A MilliCoulomb is \(10^{-3} C\).
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA782
mC
mC
D86
MilliCoulomb
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA783
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the SI base unit kilogram
mC.kg-1
C8
Millicoulomb Per Kilogram
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA784
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mC.m-2
D89
Millicoulomb Per Square Meter
Millicoulomb Per Square Metre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA785
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit coulomb divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mC.m-3
D88
Millicoulomb Per Cubic Meter
Millicoulomb Per Cubic Metre
37000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA786
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit curie
mCi
MCU
Millicurie
\(Millidegree Celsius is a scaled unit of measurement for temperature.\)
0.001
273.15
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Celsius
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec04.html#4.2.1.1">SP811 section 4.2.1.1</a></p>
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec06.html#6.2.8">SP811 section 6.2.8</a></p>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celsius?oldid=494152178
millieDegree Celsius
mCel
Millidegree Celsius
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA787
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit farad
mF
C10
Millifarad
"Milligravity" is a unit for 'Linear Acceleration' expressed as \(mG\).
0.00980665
mG
m[g]
Milligravity
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAB043
0.001-fold of the unit of acceleration called gal according to the CGS system of units
mGal
C11
Milligal
A rate of change of one millionth part of a unit of gravitational acceleration equal to one centimetre per second per second over a time duration of 30.4375 days or 2629800 seconds.
0.000000000380257053768347
mGal.mo-1
MilliGals per month
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA815
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
mg
MGM
Milligram
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA818
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mg.cm-2
H63
Milligram Per Square Centimeter
Milligram Per Square Centimetre
0.00000000001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA819
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit day
mg.d-1
F32
Milligram Per Day
A derived unit for amount-of-substance concentration measured in mg/dL.
0.01
\(mg/L\)
mg.dL-1
milligrams per decilitre
milligrams per decilitre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA822
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
mg.g-1
mg/g
H64
Milligram Per Gram
0.0000000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA823
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit hour
mg.h-1
4M
Milligram Per Hour
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA826
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit kilogram
mg.kg-1
mg/kg
Milligram Per Kilogram
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA827
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit litre
mg.L-1
mg/L
M1
Milligram Per Liter
Milligram Per Litre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA828
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit metre
mg.m-1
C12
Milligram Per Meter
Milligram Per Metre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA829
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mg.m-2
mg/m2
GO
Milligram Per Square Meter
Milligram Per Square Metre
Unavailable
0.0000000000115740740740741
mg.m-2.d-1
Milligrams per square metre per day
Unavailable
0.000000000277777777777778
mg.m-2.h-1
Milligrams per square metre per hour
Unavailable
0.000001
mg.m-2.s-1
Milligrams per square metre per second
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA830
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mg.m-3
mg/m3
GP
Milligram Per Cubic Meter
Milligram Per Cubic Metre
Unavailable
0.0000000000115740740740741
mg.m-3.d-1
Milligrams per cubic metre per day
Unavailable
0.000000000277777777777778
mg.m-3.h-1
Milligrams per cubic metre per hour
Unavailable
0.000001
mg.m-3.s-1
Milligrams per cubic metre per second
0.00000001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA833
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the unit minute
mg/min
F33
Milligram Per Minute
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA836
0.000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit second
mg/s
F34
Milligram Per Second
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA788
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit gray
mGy
C13
Milligray
A unit of inductance equal to one thousandth of a henry.
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA789
mH
mH
C14
Millihenry
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA791
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the 1 000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
mH.kOhm-1
H05
Millihenry Per Kiloohm
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA790
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the SI derived unit ohm
mH.Ohm-1
H06
Millihenry Per Ohm
0.0000254
0112/2///62720#UAA841
0.001-fold of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units
m[in_i]
77
Milli-inch
mil
thou
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA792
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit joule
mJ
C15
Millijoule
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA844
0.001-fold of the unit litre
mL
MLT
Millilitre
Millilitre
0.00016666667
0112/2///62720#UAA858
quotient of the 0.001-fold of the unit litre and the unit minute divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mL.cm-2
35
Millilitre Per Square Centimeter Minute
Millilitre Per Square Centimetre Minute
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAB085
unit of the volume flow rate millilitre divided by second related to the transfer area as 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
mL.cm-2.s-1
35
Millilitre Per Square Centimeter Second
Millilitre Per Square Centimetre Second
0.00000000001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA847
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the unit day
mL.d-1
G54
Millilitre Per Day
Millilitre Per Day
0.0000000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA850
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the unit hour
mL.h-1
G55
Millilitre Per Hour
Millilitre Per Hour
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA845
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
mL.K-1
G30
Millilitre Per Kelvin
Millilitre Per Kelvin
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAB095
0.001-fold of the unit of the volume litre divided by the SI base unit kilogram
mL.kg-1
mL/kg
KX
Millilitre Per Kilogram
Millilitre Per Kilogram
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA853
volume ratio consisting of the 0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the unit litre
mL.L-1
mL/L
L19
Millilitre Per Liter
Millilitre Per Litre
Unavailable
0.0000000000115740740740741
mL.m-2.d-1
Millilitres per square metre per day
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA854
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mL.m-3
mL/m3
H65
Millilitre Per Cubic Meter
Millilitre Per Cubic Metre
0.00000001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA855
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the unit minute
mL.min-1
mL/min
41
Millilitre Per Minute
Millilitre Per Minute
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA859
0.001-fold of the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
mL.s-1
40
Millilitre Per Second
Millilitre Per Second
The millimetre (International spelling as used by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures) or millimeter (American spelling) (SI unit symbol mm) is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one thousandth of a metre, which is the SI base unit of length. It is equal to 1000 micrometres or 1000000 nanometres. A millimetre is equal to exactly 5/127 (approximately 0.039370) of an inch.
0.001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Millimetre
\(mm\)
0112/2///62720#UAA862
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millimetre?oldid=493032457
mm
MMT
Millimeter
Millimetre
mil
0.0000000115741
https://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/www/IMOP/CIMO-Guide.html
A measure of change in depth over time for a specific area, typically used to express precipitation intensity or evaporation (the amount of liquid water evaporated per unit of time from the area)
mm/d
mm.d-1
mm/d
millimeters per day
millimetres per day
0.0000002777778
0112/2///62720#UAA866
0001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the unit hour
mm.h-1
mm/h
H67
Millimeter Per Hour
Millimetre Per Hour
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA864
0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
mm.K-1
F53
Millimeter Per Kelvin
Millimetre Per Kelvin
0.00001666667
0112/2///62720#UAB378
0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the unit minute
mm.min-1
mm/min
H81
Millimeter Per Minute
Millimetre Per Minute
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA867
0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit second
mm.s-1
C16
Millimeter Per Second
Millimetre Per Second
0.00000000000171
0112/2///62720#UAA868
0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the unit year
mm.a-1
mm/a
H66
Millimeter Per Year
Millimetre Per Year
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA871
0.000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mm2
MMK
Square Millimeter
Square Millimetre
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA872
0.000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2 divided by the SI base unit second
mm2.s-1
C17
Square Millimeter Per Second
Square Millimetre Per Second
A metric measure of volume or capacity equal to a cube 1 millimeter on each edge
0.000000001
\(mm^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA873
mm3
MMQ
Cubic Millimeter
Cubic Millimetre
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA874
volume ratio consisting of the 0.000000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mm3.m-3
L21
Cubic Millimeter Per Cubic Meter
Cubic Millimetre Per Cubic Metre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA869
0.001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 4
mm4
G77
Quartic Millimeter
Quartic Millimetre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA877
0.001-fold of the SI base unit mol
mmol
C18
Millimole
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA878
0.001-fold of the SI base unit mol divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
mmol.g-1
H68
Millimole Per Gram
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA879
0.001-fold of the SI base unit mol divided by the SI base unit kilogram
mmol.kg-1
mmol/kg
D87
Millimole Per Kilogram
The SI derived unit for amount-of-substance concentration is the mmo/L.
1.0
\(mmo/L\)
mmol.L-1
mmol/L
millimoles per litre
millimoles per litre
Unavailable.
0.001
mmol.m-2
Millimoles per square metre
Unavailable
0.0000000115740740740741
mmol.m-2.d-1
Millimoles per square metre per day
This term is based on the number of photons in a certain waveband incident per unit time (s) on a unit area (m2) divided by the Avogadro constant (6.022 x 1023 mol-1). It is used commonly to describe PAR in the 400-700 nm waveband. Definition Source: Thimijan, Richard W., and Royal D. Heins. 1982. Photometric, Radiometric, and Quantum Light Units of Measure: A Review of Procedures for Interconversion. HortScience 18:818-822.
0.001
mmol.m-2.s-1
mmol/m2/s1
Millimoles per square metre per second
Unavailable.
0.001
mmol.m-3
Millimoles per cubic metre
Unavailable.
0.0000000115740740740741
mmol.m-3.d-1
Millimoles per cubic metre per day
Unavailable
0.001
mmol.mol-1
Millimoles per mole
9.80665
0112/2///62720#UAA875
unit of pressure - 1 mmH2O is the static pressure exerted by a water column with a height of 1 mm
mm[H2O]
HP
Conventional Millimeter Of Water
Conventional Millimetre Of Water
The millimeter of mercury is defined as the pressure exerted at the base of a column of fluid exactly 1 mm high, when the density of the fluid is exactly \(13.5951 g/cm^{3}\), at a place where the acceleration of gravity is exactly \(9.80665 m/s^{2}\).
133.322387415
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Torr
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torr?oldid=495199381
mm Hg
mm[Hg]
Millimeter of Mercury
Millimetre of Mercury
Millimeters of Mercury inclusive of atmospheric pressure
mmHgA
mm[Hg]{absolute}
Millimeter of Mercury - Absolute
Millimetre of Mercury - Absolute
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA793
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit newton
mN
C20
Millinewton
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA794
0.001-fold of the product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit metre
mN.m
D83
Millinewton Meter
Millinewton Metre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA795
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit newton divided by the SI base unit metre
mN.m-1
C22
Millinewton Per Meter
Millinewton Per Metre
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA741
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
mOhm
E45
Milliohm
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA796
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit pascal
mPa
74
Millipascal
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA797
0.001-fold of the product of the SI derived unit pascal and the SI base unit second
mPa.s
C24
Millipascal Second
0.00000001
0112/2///62720#UAA799
0.001-fold of the product of the SI derived unit pascal and the SI base unit second divided by the unit of the pressure bar
mPa.s.bar-1
L16
Millipascal Second Per Bar
0.000000258
0112/2///62720#UAA898
0112/2///62720#UAB056
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roentgen_(unit)
0.001-fold of the unit roentgen.
mR
2Y
L31
Milliroentgen
0.001
<http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec07.html#7.10>
0112/2///62720#UAA897
mrad
mrad
C25
milliradian
One thousandth part of an absorbed ionizing radiation dose equal to 100 ergs per gram of irradiated material received per hour.
0.000000277777777777778
mRAD.h-1
Millirads per hour
0.000000258
0112/2///62720#UAA898
0112/2///62720#UAB056
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roentgen_equivalent_man
The roentgen equivalent man (or rem) is a CGS unit of equivalent dose, effective dose, and committed dose, which are measures of the health effect of low levels of ionizing radiation on the human body.
mREM
L31
Milliroentgen Equivalent Man
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA800
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit siemens
mS
C27
Millisiemens
0.1
0112/2///62720#UAA801
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
mS.cm-1
mS/cm
H61
Millisiemens Per Centimeter
Millisiemens Per Centimetre
Unavailable
0.001
mS.m-1
MilliSiemens per metre
"Millisecond" is an Imperial unit for 'Time' expressed as \(ms\).
0.001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Millisecond
0112/2///62720#UAA899
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millisecond?oldid=495102042
ms
ms
C26
millisecond
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA802
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit sievert
mSv
C28
Millisievert
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA803
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit tesla
mT
C29
Millitesla
"MilliTorr" is a unit for 'Force Per Area' expressed as \(utorr\).
0.133322
utorr
mTorr
MilliTorr
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA804
0,001-fold of the SI derived unit volt
mV
2Z
Millivolt
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA805
0.000001-fold of the SI derived unit volt divided by the SI base unit metre
mV.m-1
C30
Millivolt Per Meter
Millivolt Per Metre
0.00001666667
0112/2///62720#UAA806
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit volt divided by the unit minute
mV.min-1
H62
Millivolt Per Minute
mW
MilliW
Unavailable
10000000.0
mW.cm-2.um-1.sr-1
Milliwatts per square centimetre per micrometre per steradian
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA808
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit weber divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
mW.m-2
C32
Milliwatt Per Square Meter
Milliwatt Per Square Metre
Unavailable
1000000.0
mW.m-2.nm-1
Milliwatts per square metre per nanometre
Unavailable
1000000.0
mW.m-2.nm-1.sr-1
Milliwatts per square metre per nanometre per steradian
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA809
0.001-fold of the SI derived unit weber
mWb
C33
Milliweber
1000000.0
Million US Dollars
\(\(M\$/yr\)\)
Million US Dollars per Year
Moldova
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Moldovan_leu
\(MDL\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moldovan_leu?oldid=490027766
Moldovan Leu
Morocco, Western Sahara
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Moroccan_dirham
\(MAD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moroccan_dirham?oldid=490560557
Moroccan Dirham
The "Newton" is the SI unit of force. A force of one newton will accelerate a mass of one kilogram at the rate of one meter per second per second. The newton is named for Isaac Newton (1642-1727), the British mathematician, physicist, and natural philosopher. He was the first person to understand clearly the relationship between force (F), mass (m), and acceleration (a) expressed by the formula \(F = m \cdot a\).
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Newton
0112/2///62720#UAA235
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton?oldid=488427661
N
N
NEW
Newton
0.01
0112/2///62720#UAA237
product of the SI derived unit newton and the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
N.cm
F88
Newton Centimeter
Newton Centimetre
"Torque" is the tendency of a force to cause a rotation, is the product of the force and the distance from the center of rotation to the point where the force is applied. Torque has the same units as work or energy, but it is a different physical concept. To stress the difference, scientists measure torque in newton meters rather than in joules, the SI unit of work. One newton meter is approximately 0.737562 pound foot.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Newton_metre
0112/2///62720#UAA239
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton_metre?oldid=493923333
N.m
N m
N.m
NU
Newton Meter
Newton Metre
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA241
product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit ampere
N.m.A-1
F90
Newton Meter Per Ampere
Newton Metre Per Ampere
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB490
product of the derived SI unit newton and the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit kilogram
N.m.kg-1
G19
Newton Meter Per Kilogram
Newton Metre Per Kilogram
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA244
product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit metre divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
N.m.m-2
H86
Newton Meter Per Square Meter
Newton Metre Per Square Metre
The SI derived unit of angular momentum.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Newton_metre
0112/2///62720#UAA245
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_derived_unit
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31889
N.m.sec
N-m-sec
N.m.s-1
C53
Newton Meter Second
Newton Metre Second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB491
unit of gravitational constant as product of the derived SI unit newton, the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2 divided by the power of the SI base unit kilogram with the exponent 2
N.m.kg-2
C54
Newton Square Meter Per Square Kilogram
Newton Square Metre Per Square Kilogram
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA236
SI derived unit newton divided by the SI base unit ampere
N.A-1
H40
Newton Per Ampere
Newton Per Coulomb ( N/C) is a unit in the category of Electric field strength. It is also known as newtons/coulomb. Newton Per Coulomb ( N/C) has a dimension of MLT-3I-1 where M is mass, L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. It essentially the same as the corresponding standard SI unit V/m.
1.0
\(N/C\)
N.C-1
Newton per Coulomb
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA238
SI derived unit newton divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
N.cm-1
M23
Newton Per Centimeter
Newton Per Centimetre
10000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB183
derived SI unit newton divided by the 0.0001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre by exponent 2
N.cm-1
E01
Newton Per Square Centimeter
Newton Per Square Centimetre
Gravitational field strength at a point is the gravitational force per unit mass at that point. It is a vector and its S.I. unit is N kg-1.
1.0
\(N/kg\)
N.kg-1
Newton per Kilogram
Newton Per Meter (N/m) is a unit in the category of Surface tension. It is also known as newtons per meter, newton per metre, newtons per metre, newton/meter, newton/metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Newton Per Meter (N/m) has a dimension of MT-2 where M is mass, and T is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(N/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA246
N.m-1
N/m
4P
Newton per Meter
Newton per Metre
The SI unit of pressure. The pascal is the standard pressure unit in the MKS metric system, equal to one newton per square meter or one "kilogram per meter per second per second." The unit is named for Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), French philosopher and mathematician, who was the first person to use a barometer to measure differences in altitude.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pascal
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal?oldid=492989202
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31889
N/m^2
Pa
N.m-2
N-PER-M2
Unavailable
1.0
N.m-3
Newtons per cubic metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA249
SI derived unit newton divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
N.mm-1
F47
Newton Per Millimeter
Newton Per Millimetre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA250
SI derived unit newton divided by the 0.000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
N.mm-2
C56
Newton Per Square Millimeter
Newton Per Square Millimetre
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA251
product of the SI derived unit newton and the SI base unit second
N.s
C57
Newton Second
1.0
\(N-s/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA252
N.s.m-1
C58
Newton Second per Meter
Newton Second per Metre
The SI unit of specific acoustic impedance. When sound waves pass through any physical substance the pressure of the waves causes the particles of the substance to move. The sound specific impedance is the ratio between the sound pressure and the particle velocity it produces. The specific impedance is \(1 N \cdot s \cdot m^{-3} \) if unit pressure produces unit velocity.
1.0
\(N \cdot s \cdot m^{-3}\)
\(N \cdot s \cdot m^{-3}\)
N.s.m-3
Newton second per Cubic Meter
Newton second per Cubic Metre
A nat is a logarithmic unit of information or entropy, based on natural logarithms and powers of e, rather than the powers of 2 and base 2 logarithms which define the bit. The nat is the natural unit for information entropy. Physical systems of natural units which normalize Boltzmann's constant to 1 are effectively measuring thermodynamic entropy in nats.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nat
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nat?oldid=474010287
nat
Nat
"Nat per Second" is information rate in natural units.
1.0
\(nat-per-sec\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nat?oldid=474010287
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
Nat per Second
The neper is a logarithmic unit for ratios of measurements of physical field and power quantities, such as gain and loss of electronic signals. It has the unit symbol Np. The unit's name is derived from the name of John Napier, the inventor of logarithms. As is the case for the decibel and bel, the neper is not a unit in the International System of Units (SI), but it is accepted for use alongside the SI. Like the decibel, the neper is a unit in a logarithmic scale. While the bel uses the decadic (base-10) logarithm to compute ratios, the neper uses the natural logarithm, based on Euler's number
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Neper
0112/2///62720#UAA253
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neper
Np
Np
C50
Neper
"Nephelometry Turbidity Unit" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Turbidity' expressed as \(NTU\).
NTU
Nephelometry Turbidity Unit
"Number" is a unit for 'Dimensionless' expressed as (\#\).
#
1
{#}
Number
Unavailable
0.000000316880878140289
{#}.cm-2.ka-1
Number per square centimetre per thousand years
Unavailable
1000.0
{#}.g-1
Number per gram
Count of an entity or phenomenon's occurrence in 10,000 times the SI unit area (square metre).
1000000.0
{#}.har-1
Number per hectare
Unavailable
0.000277777777777778
{#}.h-1
Number per hour
Number per individual per hour
Count of an entity or phenomenon occurrence in one 10th of the SI unit of mass (kilogram).
10.0
{#}.hg-1
Number per 100 grams
Unavailable
0.000001
{#}.km-2
Number per square kilometre
Unavailable
1000.0
{#}.L-1
Number per litre
Unavailable.
1.0
{#}.m-1
Number per metre
Unavailable
1.0
{#}.m-2
Number per square metre
Unavailable
0.0000115740740740741
{#}.m-2.d-1
Number per square metre per day
Unavailable
1.0
{#}.m-3
Number per cubic metre
Unavailable
1000000000.0
{#}.uL-1
Number per microlitre
Count of an entity or phenomenon occurrence in one millionth of the SI unit of mass (kilogram).
1000000.0
{#}.mg-1
Number per milligram
Unavailable
2147483647.0
{#}.nL-1
Number per nanolitre
Unavailable
1.0
{#}.s-1
Counts per second
"Number per Year" is a unit for 'Frequency' expressed as \(\#/yr\).
\(\#/yr\)
{#}.a-1
Number per Year
Nigeria
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nigerian_naira
\(NGN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_naira?oldid=493462003
Naira
Eritrea
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nakfa
\(ERN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakfa?oldid=415286274
Nakfa
Namibia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Namibian_dollar
\(NAD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namibian_dollar?oldid=495250023
Namibian Dollar
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA901
nA
nA
C39
nanoampere
Unavailable
0.000001
nBq.L-1
Nanobecquerels per litre
A NanoCoulomb is \(10^{-9} C\).
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA902
nC
nC
C40
NanoCoulomb
A common metric unit of electric capacitance equal to \(10^{-9} farad\). This unit was previously called the \(millimicrofarad\).
0.000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Farad
0112/2///62720#UAA903
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farad?oldid=493070876
nF
nF
C41
Nanofarad
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA904
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit farad divided by the SI base unit metre
nF.m-1
C42
Nanofarad Per Meter
Nanofarad Per Metre
10**-9 grams or one 10**-12 of the SI standard unit of mass (kilogram).
0.000000000001
ng
Nanograms
Unavailable
0.0000000000000000115740740740741
ng.d-1
Nanograms per day
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA911
mass ratio consisting of the 0.000000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the SI base unit kilogram
ng.kg-1
ng/kg
L32
Nanogram Per Kilogram
Unavailable
0.000000001
ng.L-1
Nanograms per litre
0.000000000001
"0.000000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3"
0.000000000001-fold of the SI base unit kilogram divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
ng.m-3
"Derived from GM-PER-M3 which exists in QUDT"
Nanogram Per Cubic Meter
Nanogram Per Cubic Metre
Unavailable
0.001
ng.uL-1
Nanograms per microlitre
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA905
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry
nH
C43
Nanohenry
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA906
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry divided by the SI base unit metre
nH.m-1
C44
Nanohenry Per Meter
Nanohenry Per Metre
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA912
0.000000001-fold of the SI base unit metre
nm
C45
Nanometer
Nanometre
0.000000000000000001
\(sqnm\)
A unit of area equal to that of a square, of sides 1nm
nm2
Square Nanometer
Square Nanometre
Unavailable
0.000000277777777777778
nmol.cm-3.h-1
Nanomoles per cubic centimetre per hour
Unavailable
0.000000001
nmol.kg-1
Nanomoles per kilogram
Unavailable
0.0000000000115740740740741
nmol.L-1.d-1
Nanomoles per litre per day
Unavailable
0.000000000277777777777778
nmol.L-1.h-1
Nanomoles per litre per hour
Unavailable
0.0000000000000115740740740741
nmol.m-2.d-1
Nanomoles per square metre per day
Unavailable
0.000277777777777778
nmol.ug-1.h-1
Nanomoles per microgram per hour
Unavailable.
0.001
nmol.umol-1
Nanomoles per micromole
Unavailable.
0.0000000115740740740741
nmol.umol-1.d-1
Nanomoles per micromole per day
0.0000001
0112/2///62720#UAA907
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens by the 0.01 fol of the SI base unit metre
nS.cm-1
G44
Nanosiemens Per Centimeter
Nanosiemens Per Centimetre
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA908
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
nS.m-1
G45
Nanosiemens Per Meter
Nanosiemens Per Metre
A nanosecond is a SI unit of time equal to one billionth of a second (10-9 or 1/1,000,000,000 s). One nanosecond is to one second as one second is to 31.69 years. The word nanosecond is formed by the prefix nano and the unit second.
0.000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nanosecond
0112/2///62720#UAA913
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanosecond?oldid=919778950
ns
ns
C47
nanosecond
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA909
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit tesla
nT
C48
Nanotesla
0.000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA910
0.000000001-fold of the SI derived unit watt
nW
C49
Nanowatt
Nepal
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nepalese_rupee
\(NPR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nepalese_rupee?oldid=476894226
Nepalese Rupee
Netherlands Antilles
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Netherlands_Antillean_guilder
\(ANG\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netherlands_Antillean_guilder?oldid=490030382
Netherlands Antillian Guilder
Israel
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Israeli_new_sheqel
\(ILS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_new_sheqel?oldid=316213924
New Israeli Shekel
Taiwan and other islands that are under the effective control of the Republic of China (ROC)
1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/New_Taiwan_dollar
\(TWD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Taiwan_dollar?oldid=493996933
New Taiwan Dollar
Turkey
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Turkish_lira
\(TRY\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_lira?oldid=494097764
New Turkish Lira
Cook Islands, New Zealand, Niue, Pitcairn, Tokelau
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/New_Zealand_dollar
\(NZD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_dollar?oldid=495487722
New Zealand Dollar
Bhutan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bhutanese_ngultrum
\(BTN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhutanese_ngultrum?oldid=491579260
Ngultrum
North Korea
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/North_Korean_won
\(KPW\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Korean_won?oldid=495081686
North Korean Won
Norway
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Norwegian_krone
\(NOK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_krone?oldid=495283934
Norwegian Krone
Peru
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Peruvian_nuevo_sol
\(PEN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peruvian_nuevo_sol?oldid=494237249
Nuevo Sol
An octave is a doubling or halving of a frequency. One oct is the logarithmic frequency interval between \(f1\) and \(f2\) when \(f2/f1 = 2\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Octave
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octave_(electronics)
oct
Oct
Oersted (abbreviated as Oe) is the unit of magnetizing field (also known as H-field, magnetic field strength or intensity) in the CGS system of units.
79.5774715
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Oersted
0112/2///62720#UAB134
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oersted?oldid=491396460
Oe
Oe
66
Oersted
"Oersted Centimeter" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Magnetomotive Force' expressed as \(Oe-cm\).
0.795774715
\(Oe-cm\)
Oe.cm
Oersted Centimeter
Oersted Centimetre
The \textit{ohm} is the SI derived unit of electrical resistance, named after German physicist Georg Simon Ohm. \(\Omega \equiv\ \frac{\text{V}}{\text{A}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{volt}}{\text{amp}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{W}}{\text {A}^{2}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{watt}}{\text{amp}^{2}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{H}}{\text {s}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{henry}}{\text{second}}\)
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ohm
0112/2///62720#UAA017
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm?oldid=494685555
V/A
Ω
Ohm
OHM
Ohm
0112/2///62720#UAA020
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
Ohm.m
C61
Ohm Meter
Ohm Metre
1.0
Ohm-m2/m
Ohm2.m.m-1
Ohm Square Meter per Meter
Ohm Square Metre per Metre
\(\textit{abohm}\) is the basic unit of electrical resistance in the emu-cgs system of units. One abohm is equal to \(10^{-9} ohms\) in the SI system of units; one abohm is a nano ohm.
0.000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abohm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abohm?oldid=480725336
abΩ
nOhm
Abohm
"StatOHM" is the unit of resistance, reactance, and impedance in the electrostatic C.G.S system of units, equal to the resistance between two points of a conductor when a constant potential difference of 1 statvolt between these points produces a current of 1 statampere; it is equal to approximately \(8.9876 \times 10^{11} ohms\). The statohm is an extremely large unit of resistance. In fact, an object with a resistance of 1 stat W would make an excellent insulator or dielectric . In practical applications, the ohm, the kilohm (k W ) and the megohm (M W or M) are most often used to quantify resistance.
898760000000.0
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/statohm-stat-W
\(stat\Omega\)
stat Ω
Statohm
An ounce of mass is 1/16th of a pound of mass, based on the international standard definition of the pound as exactly 0.45359237 kg.
0.028349523125
ozm
[oz_av]
Ounce Mass
0.0086409
0112/2///62720#UAB133
unit of the unbalance as a product of avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units and foot according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units
[oz_av].[ft_i]
4R
Ounce (avoirdupois) Foot
0.000694563
0112/2///62720#UAB132
unit of the unbalance as a product of avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units and inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units
[oz_av].[in_i]
4Q
Ounce (avoirdupois) Inch
0.00000032812
0112/2///62720#UAA919
traditional unit of the mass avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the unit for time day
[oz_av].d-1
L33
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Day
7.8125
0112/2///62720#UAA924
https://cdd.iec.ch/cdd/iec61360/iec61360.nsf/Units/0112-2---62720%23UAA924
unit of the density according to the Anglo-American system of units
[oz_av].[gal_us]-1
L38
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Gallon (US)
0.00000787487
0112/2///62720#UAA920
traditional unit of the mass avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[oz_av].h-1
L34
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Hour
0.000472492
0112/2///62720#UAA921
traditional unit of the mass avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[oz_av].min-1
L35
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Minute
0.02834952
0112/2///62720#UAA922
traditional unit of the mass avoirdupois ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[oz_av].s-1
L36
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Second
0.0370798
0112/2///62720#UAA918
unit ounce according to the avoirdupois system of units divided by the power of the unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3
[oz_av].[cyd_i]-1
G32
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Cubic Yard
"Ounce Force" is an Imperial unit for 'Force' expressed as \(ozf\).
0.278013875
ozf
[ozf_av]
Imperial Ounce Force
"Ounce Force Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Torque' expressed as \(ozf-in\).
0.0706155243
[ozf_av].[in_i]
Imperial Ounce Force Inch
"Ounce per Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Area' expressed as \(oz/ft^{2}\).
0.305151727
oz/ft^{2}
[oz_av].[sft_i]-1
Imperial Mass Ounce per Square Foot
"Ounce per Gallon" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(oz/gal\).
6.23602329
oz/gal
[oz_av].[gal_br]-1
Imperial Mass Ounce per Gallon
6.2360
0112/2///62720#UAA923
unit of the density according to the Imperial system of units
[oz_av].[gal_br]-1
L37
Ounce (avoirdupois) Per Gallon (UK)
"Ounce per Cubic Inch" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(oz/in^{3}\).
1729.99404
oz/in^{3}
[oz_av].[cin_i]-1
Imperial Mass Ounce per Cubic Inch
"Ounce per Square Yard" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Area' expressed as \(oz/yd^{2}\).
0.0339057474748823
oz/yd^{2}
[oz_av].[syd_i]-1
Imperial Mass Ounce per Square Yard
An obsolete unit of mass; the Troy Ounce is 1/12th of a Troy Pound. Based on the international definition of a Troy Pound as 5760 grains, the Troy Ounce is exactly 480 grains, or 0.0311034768 kg.
0.0311034768
oz
[oz_tr]
Ounce Troy
\(\textit{Imperial Ounce}\) is an Imperial unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(oz\).
0.0000284130625
0112/2///62720#UAA431
unit of the volume for fluids according to the Imperial system of units
[foz_br]
OZI
Fluid Ounce (UK)
0.00000787487
0112/2///62720#UAA432
unit of the volume fluid ounce (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[foz_br].d-1
J95
Ounce (UK Fluid) Per Day
0.00000787487
0112/2///62720#UAA433
unit of the volume fluid ounce (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[foz_br].h-1
J96
Ounce (UK Fluid) Per Hour
0.00472492
0112/2///62720#UAA434
unit of the volume fluid ounce (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[foz_br].min-1
J97
Ounce (UK Fluid) Per Minute
0.0000284
0112/2///62720#UAA435
unit of the volume fluid ounce (UK) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[foz_br].s-1
J98
Ounce (UK Fluid) Per Second
"US Liquid Ounce" is a unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(oz\).
0.0000295735296
oz
[foz_us]
US Liquid Ounce
0.000000000342286
0112/2///62720#UAA436
unit of the volume fluid ounce (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by unit for time day
[foz_us].d-1
J99
Ounce (US Fluid) Per Day
0.000000008214869
0112/2///62720#UAA437
unit of the volume fluid ounce (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[foz_us].h-1
K10
Ounce (US Fluid) Per Hour
0.000000492892
0112/2///62720#UAA438
unit of the volume fluid ounce (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[foz_us].min-1
K11
Ounce (US Fluid) Per Minute
0.0000295735296
0112/2///62720#UAA439
unit of the volume fluid ounce (US) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[foz_us].s-1
K12
Ounce (US Fluid) Per Second
Oman
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Omani_rial
\(OMR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omani_rial?oldid=491748879
Rial Omani
Mauritania
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mauritanian_ouguiya
\(MRO\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauritanian_ouguiya?oldid=490027072
Ouguiya
The SI unit of pressure. The pascal is the standard pressure unit in the MKS metric system, equal to one newton per square meter or one "kilogram per meter per second per second." The unit is named for Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), French philosopher and mathematician, who was the first person to use a barometer to measure differences in altitude.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pascal
0112/2///62720#UAA258
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal?oldid=492989202
N/m^2
Pa
Pa
PAL
Pascal
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA261
product out of the SI derived unit pascal and the unit litre divided by the SI base unit second
Pa.L.s-1
F99
Pascal Liter Per Second
Pascal Litre Per Second
Unavailable
1.0
Pa.m
Pascal metres
Unavailable
1.0
Pa.m.s-1
Pascal metres per second
Unavailable
1.0
Pa.m.s-2
Pascal metres per square second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA264
product out of the SI derived unit pascal and the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
Pa.m3.s-1
G01
Pascal Cubic Meter Per Second
Pascal Cubic Metre Per Second
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAA260
SI derived unit pascal divided by the unit bar
Pa.bar-1
F07
Pascal Per Bar
A rate of change of pressure measured as the number of Pascals in a period of one hour.
0.000277777778
\(P / hr\)
Pa.h-1
Pascal per Hour
\(pascal-per-kelvin\)
0112/2///62720#UAA259
Pa.K-1
C64
Pascal per Kelvin
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA262
SI derived unit pascal divided by the SI base unit metre
Pa.m-1
Pa/m
H42
Pascal Per Meter
Pascal Per Metre
A rate of change of pressure measured as the number of Pascals in a period of one minute.
0.0166666667
\(P / min\)
Pa.min-1
Pascal per Minute
A rate of change of pressure measured as the number of Pascals in a period of one second.
1.0
\(P / s\)
Pa.s-1
Pa/s
Pascal per Second
The SI unit of dynamic viscosity, equal to 10 poises or 1000 centipoises.
1.0
\(Pa-s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA265
Pa.s
Pa.s
C65
Pascal Second
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAA267
product out of the SI derived unit pascal and the SI base unit second divided by the unit bar
Pa.s.bar-1
H07
Pascal Second Per Bar
Pascal Second Per Meter (\(Pa-s/m\)) is a unit in the category of Specific acoustic impedance. It is also known as pascal-second/meter. Pascal Second Per Meter has a dimension of \(ML^2T^{-1}\) where M is mass, L is length, and T is time. It essentially the same as the corresponding standard SI unit \(kg/m2\cdot s\).
1.0
\(Pa-s/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA268
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--specific_acoustic_impedance--pascal_second_per_meter.cfm
Pa.s/m
P.s.m-1
C67
Pascal Second Per Meter
Pascal Second Per Metre
\(\textit{Pascal Second Per Cubic Meter}\) (\(Pa-s/m^3\)) is a unit in the category of Acoustic impedance. It is also known as \(\textit{pascal-second/cubic meter}\). It has a dimension of \(ML^{-4}T^{-1}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(Pa-s/m3\)
0112/2///62720#UAA263
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--acoustic_impedance--pascal_second_per_cubic_meter.cfm
Pa.s/m3
Pa.s.m-3
C66
Pascal Second Per Cubic Meter
Pascal Second Per Cubic Metre
Unavailable
1.0
Pa2.s-2
Square pascal per square second
Square Pascal Second (\(Pa^2\cdot s\)) is a unit in the category of sound exposure.
1.0
\(Pa2-s\)
0112/2///62720#UAB339
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--specific_acoustic_impedance--pascal_second_per_meter.cfm
Pa2.s
Pa2.s
Square Pascal Second
Panama
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Balboa
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balboa?oldid=482550791
Balboa
The parsec (parallax of one arcsecond; symbol: pc) is a unit of length, equal to just under 31 trillion (\(31 \times 10^{12}\)) kilometres (about 19 trillion miles), 206265 AU, or about 3.26 light-years. The parsec measurement unit is used in astronomy. It is defined as the length of the adjacent side of an imaginary right triangle in space. The two dimensions that specify this triangle are the parallax angle (defined as 1 arcsecond) and the opposite side (defined as 1 astronomical unit (AU), the distance from the Earth to the Sun). Given these two measurements, along with the rules of trigonometry, the length of the adjacent side (the parsec) can be found.
30856780000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB067
pc
pc
C63
Parsec
A pica is a typographic unit of measure corresponding to 1/72 of its respective foot, and therefore to 1/6 of an inch. The pica contains 12 point units of measure. Notably, Adobe PostScript promoted the pica unit of measure that is the standard in contemporary printing, as in home computers and printers. Usually, pica measurements are represented with an upper-case 'P' with an upper-right-to-lower-left virgule (slash) starting in the upper right portion of the 'P' and ending at the lower left of the upright portion of the 'P'; essentially drawing a virgule (/) through a 'P'. Note that these definitions are different from a typewriter's pica setting, which denotes a type size of ten characters per horizontal inch.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pica
0112/2///62720#UAB606
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pica?oldid=458102937
PCA
[pca]
R1
Pica
The poundal is a unit of force that is part of the foot-pound-second system of units, in Imperial units introduced in 1877, and is from the specialized subsystem of English absolute (a coherent system). The poundal is defined as the force necessary to accelerate 1 pound-mass to 1 foot per second per second. \(1 pdl = 0.138254954376 N\) exactly.
0.138254954376
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Poundal
0112/2///62720#UAB233
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poundal?oldid=494626458
pdl
[lb_av].[ft_i].s-2
Poundal
Poundal Per Square Foot (\(pdl/ft^2\)) is a unit in the category of Pressure. It is also known as poundals per square foot, poundal/square foot. This unit is commonly used in the UK, US unit systems. Poundal Per Square Foot has a dimension of \(ML^{-1}T^{-2}\), where M is mass, L is length, and T is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \si{Pa} by multiplying its value by a factor of 1.488163944.
1.48816443
\(pdl/ft^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB243
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--pressure--poundal_per_square_foot.cfm
[lb_av].[ft_i].s-2.[sft_i]-1
Poundal per Square Foot
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAB058
reciprocal of the unit angstrom
Ao-1
C85
Reciprocal ångström
0.00001
0112/2///62720#UAA328
reciprocal of the metrical unit with the name bar
bar-1
F58
Reciprocal Bar
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA382
reciprocal of the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
/cm
cm-1
E90
Reciprocal Centimeter
Reciprocal Centimetre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA383
reciprocal of the 0.000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
cm-3
H50
Reciprocal Cubic Centimeter
Reciprocal Cubic Centimetre
0.00001157407
0112/2///62720#UAA408
reciprocal of the unit day
/d
d-1
E91
Reciprocal Day
35.31466
0112/2///62720#UAA453
reciprocal value of the power of the unit foot according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3
[cft_i]-1
K20
Reciprocal Cubic Foot
Unavailable
1000.0
g-1
Reciprocal gram
Per Square Giga Electron Volt Unit is a a denominator unit with dimensions \(/GeV^2\).
38956440500000000000.0
\(/GeV^2\)
GeV-2
Reciprocal Square Giga Electron Volt Unit
H-1
Reciprocal Henry
A reciprocal unit of time for \(\textit{reciprocal hour}\) or "inverse hour".
360.0
\(m^{-1}\)
/h
h-1
Reciprocal Hour
61023.76
0112/2///62720#UAA546
reciprocal value of the power of the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3
[cin_i]-1
K49
Reciprocal Cubic Inch
\(j^{-1}-m^3\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
J-1.m-3
Reciprocal Joule Cubic Meter
Reciprocal Joule Cubic Metre
Per Kelvin Unit is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/k\).
1.0
\(/K\)
K-1
Reciprocal Kelvin
0.001
0112/2///62720#UAA098
reciprocal of the 1,000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit volt and the SI base unit ampere and the unit hour
K-1.A-1.h-1
M21
Reciprocal Kilovolt Ampere Hour
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA667
reciprocal value of the unit litre
L-1
K63
Reciprocal Liter
Reciprocal Litre
Per Meter Unit is a a denominator unit with dimensions \(/m\).
1.0
\(per-meter\)
/m
m-1
Reciprocal Meter
Reciprocal Metre
Per Meter Kelvin Unit is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/m.k\).
1.0
\(/m.k\)
m-1.K-1
Reciprocal Meter Kelvin
Reciprocal Metre Kelvin
Unavailable
1000000000.0
m-1.nm-1
Reciprocal metre per nanometre
Unavailable
1000000000.0
m-1.nm-1.sr-1
Reciprocal metre per nanometre per steradian
Unavailable
1.0
m-1.s-1
Reciprocal metre per second
Unavailable
1.0
m-1.sr-1
Reciprocal metre per steradian
"Per Square Meter" is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/m^2\).
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m^{-2}
/m2
m-2
Reciprocal Square Meter
Reciprocal Square Metre
Unavailable
1.0
\(m^{-2}-s^{-1}\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m-2.s-1
Reciprocal Square Meter Second
Reciprocal Square Metre Second
Reciprocal square metre per second
"Per Cubic Meter" is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/m^3\).
1.0
\(/m^3\)
/m3
m-3
Reciprocal Cubic Meter
Reciprocal Cubic Metre
Unavailable
1.0
\(m^{-3}-s^{-1}\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31895
m-3.s-1
Reciprocal Cubic Meter Second
Reciprocal Cubic Metre Second
Reciprocal cubic metre per second
0.0000001450377
0112/2///62720#UAA016
thousandth divided by the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch)
J12
Reciprocal Mille Per Psi
A reciprocal unit of time for \(\textit{reciprocal minute}\) or \(\textit{inverse minute}\).
60.0
\(m^{-1}\)
/min
min-1
Reciprocal Minute
0.000000391935077
0112/2///62720#UAA881
reciprocal of the unit month
mo-1
H11
Reciprocal Month
<p><strong>Per Mole Unit</strong> is a a denominator unit with dimensions \(mol^{-1}\)</p>.
1.0
\(/mol\)
mol-1
Reciprocal Mole
Units used to describe the sensitivity of detection of a spectrophotometer.
1000000000.0
umol-1.L-1
Reciprocal micromole per litre
1000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA870
reciprocal value of the 0.000000001-fold of the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
mm-3
L20
Reciprocal Cubic Millimeter
Reciprocal Cubic Millimetre
Unavailable
1000.0
ms-1
Reciprocal millisecond
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pascal
\(/Pa\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal?oldid=492989202
m^2/N
Pa-1
Reciprocal Pascal
Unavailable
1.0
Pa-1.s-1
Reciprocal Pascal per second
0.0001450377
0112/2///62720#UAA709
reciprocal value of the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch)
[psi]-1
K93
Reciprocal Psi
In physics, the Planck mass, denoted by \(m_P\), is the unit of mass in the system of natural units known as Planck units. It is defined so that \(\approx 1.2209 \times 10 GeV/c_0 = 2.17651(13) \times 10 kg\), (or \(21.7651 \mu g\)), where \(c_0\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(G\) is the gravitational constant, and \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck constant. Particle physicists and cosmologists often use the reduced Planck mass, which is \(\approx 4.341 \times 10 kg = 2.435 \times 10 GeV/c\). The added factor of \(1/{\sqrt{8\pi}}\) simplifies a number of equations in general relativity. Quantum effects are typified by the magnitude of Planck's constant.
2111089000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_mass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_mass?oldid=493648632
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
\(m_P = \sqrt{\frac{ \hbar c^3}{G}} \approx 1.2209 \times 10^{19} GeV/c^2 = 2.17651(13) \times 10^{-8}\), where \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck's constant, and \(G\) is the gravitational constant. The two digits enclosed by parentheses are the estimated standard error associated with the reported numerical value.
Inverse Square Planck Mass
A reciprical unit of time for \(\textit{reciprocal second}\) or \(\textit{inverse second}\). The \(\textit{Per Second}\) is a unit of rate.
1.0
\(sec^{-1}}\)
/s
s-1
Reciprocal Second
\(\textit{Per Second Square Meter}\) is a measure of flux with dimensions \(/sec-m^2\).
1.0
\(per-sec-m^2\)
/(s1.m2)
s-1.m-2
Reciprocal Second Square Meter
Reciprocal Second Square Metre
Per Second Square Meter Steradian is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/sec-m^2-sr\).
1.0
\(/sec-m^2-sr\)
/(s.m2.sr)
s-1.m-2.sr-1
It is not clear this unit is ever used. [Editor]
Reciprocal Second Square Meter Steradian
Reciprocal Second Square Metre Steradian
Per Second Steradian Unit is a denominator unit with dimensions \(/sec-sr\).
1.0
\(/sec-sr\)
/(s.sr)
s-1.sr-1
Reciprocal Second Steradian
Unavailable
1.0
s-2
Reciprocal square second
Unavailable
1.0
sr-1
Reciprocal steradian
Per Tesla Meter Unit is a a denominator unit with dimensions \(/m .\cdot T\).
1.0
\(m^{-1} \cdot T^{-1}\)
T-1.m-1
Reciprocal Tesla Meter
Reciprocal Tesla Metre
Per Tesla Second Unit is a a denominator unit with dimensions \(/s . T\).
1.0
\(/s . T\)
T-1.s-1
Reciprocal Tesla Second Unit
\(Wb^{-1}\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
Wb-1
Reciprocal Weber
0.000001653439
0112/2///62720#UAA099
reciprocal of the unit week
wk-1
H85
Reciprocal Week
1.307951
0112/2///62720#UAB033
reciprocal value of the unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3
[cyd_i]-1
M10
Reciprocal Cubic Yard
0.000000031709792
0112/2///62720#UAB027
reciprocal of the unit year
/a
a-1
H09
Reciprocal Year
"Percent" is a unit for 'Dimensionless Ratio' expressed as \(\%\).
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Percentage
0112/2///62720#UAA000
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage?oldid=495284540
%
%
P1
Percent
Unavailable
0.0000115740740740741
%.d-1
Percent per day
Unavailable
0.000277777777777778
%.h-1
Percent per hour
Unavailable
1.0
%.m-1
Percent per metre
A rate of change in percent over a period of 7 days
0.00000165343915343915
%.wk-1
Percent per week
0.01
Percent relative humidity is the ratio of the partial pressure of water vapor to the equilibrium vapor pressure of water at a given temperature, expressed as a percentage.
Percent Relative Humidity
Relative permeability, denoted by the symbol \(\mu _T\), is the ratio of the permeability of a specific medium to the permeability of free space \(\mu _0\)
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relative_permeability
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_permeability
\(\mu\,T\)
[mu_0]
Relative Electromagnetic Permeability
In multiphase flow in porous media, the relative permeability of a phase is a dimensionless measure of the effective permeability of that phase. It is the ratio of the effective permeability of that phase to the absolute permeability. It can be viewed as an adaptation of Darcy's law to multiphase flow. For two-phase flow in porous media given steady-state conditions, we can write where is the flux, is the pressure drop, is the viscosity.
0.00000125663706
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relative_permeability
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_permeability
Relative Permeability
The \(\textit{relative permittivity}\) of a material under given conditions reflects the extent to which it concentrates electrostatic lines of flux. In technical terms, it is the ratio of the amount of electrical energy stored in a material by an applied voltage, relative to that stored in a vacuum. Likewise, it is also the ratio of the capacitance of a capacitor using that material as a dielectric, compared to a similar capacitor that has a vacuum as its dielectric. Relative permittivity is a dimensionless number that is in general complex. The imaginary portion of the permittivity corresponds to a phase shift of the polarization P relative to E and leads to the attenuation of electromagnetic waves passing through the medium.</p>
<p>\(\epsilon_r(w) = \frac{\epsilon(w)}{\epsilon_O}\)\ where \(\epsilon_r(w)\) is the complex frequency-dependent absolute permittivity of the material, and \(\epsilon_O\) is the vacuum permittivity.
0.000000000008854187817
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relative_static_permittivity
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_permittivity?oldid=489664437
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_static_permittivity?oldid=334224492
http://www.ncert.nic.in/html/learning_basket/electricity/electricity/charges%20&%20fields/absolute_permittivity.htm
εᵣ
[eps_0]
Relative Permittivity
the negative decadic logarithmus of the concentration of free protons (or hydronium ions) expressed in 1 mol/l.
[pH]
Unsure about dimensionality of pH; conversion requires a log function not just a multiplier
Acidity
"Imperial Pint" is an Imperial unit for 'Volume' expressed as \(pint\).
0.00056826125
pi
[pt_br]
Imperial Pint
0.0005682613
0112/2///62720#UAA952
unit of the volume (both for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units
[pt_br]
PTI
Pint (UK)
0.000000006577098
0112/2///62720#UAA953
unit of the volume pint (UK) (both for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[pt_br].d
L53
Pint (UK) Per Day
0.0000001578504
0112/2///62720#UAA954
unit of the volume pint (UK) (both for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[pt_br].h-1
L54
Pint (UK) Per Hour
0.000009471022
0112/2///62720#UAA955
unit of the volume pint (UK) (both for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[pt_br].min-1
L55
Pint (UK) Per Minute
0.0005682613
0112/2///62720#UAA956
unit of the volume pint (UK) (both for fluids and for dry measures) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[pt_br].s-1
L56
Pint (UK) Per Second
"US Liquid Pint" is a unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(pt\).
0.0004731765
pt
[pt_us]
US Liquid Pint
0.00000000547658
0112/2///62720#UAA958
unit of the volume pint (US liquid) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time day
[pt_us].d-1
L57
Pint (US Liquid) Per Day
0.0000001314379
0112/2///62720#UAA959
unit of the volume pint (US liquid) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[pt_us].h-1
L58
Pint (US Liquid) Per Hour
0.000007886275
0112/2///62720#UAA960
unit of the volume pint (US liquid) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[pt_us].min-1
L59
Pint (US Liquid) Per Minute
0.0004731765
0112/2///62720#UAA961
unit of the volume pint (US liquid) according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[pt_us].s-1
L60
Pint (US Liquid) Per Second
"US Dry Pint" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Dry Volume' expressed as \(dry_pt\).
0.000550610471
dry_pt
[dpt_us]
US Dry Pint
0.009092181
0112/2///62720#UAA939
unit of the volume according to the Imperial system of units
[pk_br]
L43
Peck (UK)
0.000000105233576
0112/2///62720#UAA940
unit of the volume peck (UK) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[pk_br].d-1
L44
Peck (UK) Per Day
0.000002525605833
0112/2///62720#UAA941
unit of the volume peck (UK) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[pk_br].h-1
L45
Peck (UK) Per Hour
0.00015153635
0112/2///62720#UAA942
unit of the volume peck (UK) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[pk_br].min-1
L46
Peck (UK) Per Minute
0.009092181
0112/2///62720#UAA943
unit of the volume peck (UK) according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[pk_br].s-1
L47
Peck (UK) Per Second
A peck is an imperial and U.S. customary unit of dry volume, equivalent to 2 gallons or 8 dry quarts or 16 dry pints. Two pecks make a kenning (obsolete), and four pecks make a bushel. In Scotland, the peck was used as a dry measure until the introduction of imperial units as a result of the Weights and Measures Act of 1824. The peck was equal to about 9 litres (in the case of certain crops, such as wheat, peas, beans and meal) and about 13 litres (in the case of barley, oats and malt). A firlot was equal to 4 pecks and the peck was equal to 4 lippies or forpets.
0.00880976754
pk
[pk_us]
US Peck
0.000000101964902
0112/2///62720#UAA944
unit of the volume peck (US dry) as dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time day
[pk_us].d-1
L48
Peck (US Dry) Per Day
0.000002447157651
0112/2///62720#UAA945
unit of the volume peck (US dry) as dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[pk_us].h-1
L49
Peck (US Dry) Per Hour
0.000146829459067
0112/2///62720#UAA946
unit of the volume peck (US dry) as dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[pk_us].min-1
L50
Peck (US Dry) Per Minute
0.00880976754
0112/2///62720#UAA947
unit of the volume peck (US dry) as dry measure according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[pk_us].s-1
L51
Peck (US Dry) Per Second
The poise is the unit of dynamic viscosity in the centimetre gram second system of units. It is named after Jean Louis Marie Poiseuille.
0.1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Poise
0112/2///62720#UAA255
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poise?oldid=487835641
P
P
89
Poise
0.000001
0112/2///62720#UAA257
CGS unit poise divided by the unit bar
P.bar-1
F06
Poise Per Bar
Dimensionless unit for concentration. Recommended practice is to use specific units such as \(ug/l\).
0.000000001
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#section-Derived-Unit-Atoms
ppb
[ppb]
Parts per billion
Dimensionless unit for concentration. Recommended practice is to use specific units such as \(ug/l\).
0.000001
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#section-Derived-Unit-Atoms
ppm
[ppm]
Parts per million
Dimensionless unit for concentration. Recommended practice is to use specific units such as \(ug/l\).
‰
0.001
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#section-Derived-Unit-Atoms
‰
‰
[ppth]
Parts per thousand
per mil
Unavailable
0.000000277777777777778
[ppth].h-1
Parts per thousand per hour
Dimensionless unit for concentration. Recommended practice is to use specific units such as \(ug/l\).
0.000000000001
http://aurora.regenstrief.org/~ucum/ucum.html#section-Derived-Unit-Atoms
pptr
[pptr]
Parts per trillion
Unavailable
0.000000000001
[pptr]{vol}
Parts per trillion by volume
6894.75789
Pounds of force per square inch, the unit for pressure as a compounded unit pound-force according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the power of the unit Inch according to the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units by exponent 2
[psi]
PSI
0.1129848
0112/2///62720#UAA703
product of the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) and the composed unit for volume flow (cubic inch per second)
[psi].[cin_i].s-1
K87
Psi Cubic Inch Per Second
6.894757
0112/2///62720#UAA704
product of the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) and the composed unit for volume flow (litre per second)
[psi].L.s-1
K88
Psi Liter Per Second
Psi Litre Per Second
6894.757
0112/2///62720#UAA705
product of the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) and the composed unit for volume flow (cubic metre per second)
[psi].m3.s-1
K89
PSI Cubic Meter Per Second
PSI Cubic Metre Per Second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA951
composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) divided by the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch)
[psi].[psi]-1
L52
Psi Per Psi
5271.42
0112/2///62720#UAA706
product of the composed unit for pressure (pound-force per square inch) and the square inch) and the composed unit for volume flow (cubic yard per second)
[psi].[cyd_i].s-1
K90
Psi Cubic Yard Per Second
Practical salinity scale 1978 (PSS-78) is used for ionic content of seawater determined by electrical conductivity. Salinities measured using PSS-78 do not have units, but are approximately scaled to parts-per-thousand for the valid range. The suffix psu or PSU (denoting practical salinity unit) is sometimes added to PSS-78 measurement values. The addition of PSU as a unit after the value is "formally incorrect and strongly discouraged".
Practical salinity unit
In typography, a point is the smallest unit of measure, being a subdivision of the larger pica. It is commonly abbreviated as pt. The point has long been the usual unit for measuring font size and leading and other minute items on a printed page.
0.0000254
0112/2///62720#UAB605
pt
[pnt]
N3
Point
Tonga
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tongan_pa%CA%BBanga
\(TOP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongan_paʻanga?oldid=482738012
Pa'anga
Pakistan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pakistani_rupee
\(PKR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani_rupee?oldid=494937873
Pakistan Rupee
\(XPD\)
[oz_tr]{Pd}
Palladium (one Troy ounce)
Macau Special Administrative Region
1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pataca
\(MOP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pataca?oldid=482490442
Pataca
The pebibyte is a standards-based binary multiple (prefix pebi, symbol Pi) of the byte, a unit of digital information storage. The pebibyte unit symbol is PiB. 1 pebibyte = 1125899906842624bytes = 1024 tebibytes The pebibyte is closely related to the petabyte, which is defined as \(10^{15} bytes = 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes\).
6243314768165359.2088811673338586
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pebibyte
0112/2///62720#UAA274
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebibyte?oldid=492685015
PiB
E60
PebiByte
0.001555174
0112/2///62720#UAB182
non SI-conforming unit of mass which comes from the Anglo-American Troy or Apothecaries' Weight System of units according to NIST of 1 pwt = 1.555174 10^3 kg
[pwt_tr]
DWT
Pennyweight
A petabyte is a unit of information equal to one quadrillion bytes, or 1024 terabytes. The unit symbol for the petabyte is PB. The prefix peta (P) indicates the fifth power to 1000: 1 PB = 1000000000000000B, 1 million gigabytes = 1 thousand terabytes The pebibyte (PiB), using a binary prefix, is the corresponding power of 1024, which is more than \(12\% \)greater (\(2^{50} bytes = 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes\)).
5545177444479562.4753378569716654
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Petabyte
0112/2///62720#UAB187
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petabyte?oldid=494735969
PB
PBy
E36
PetaByte
A PetaCoulomb is \(10^{15} C\).
1000000000000000.0
PC
PC
PetaCoulomb
1000000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB123
1,000,000,000,000,000-fold of the derived SI unit joule
PJ
C68
Petajoule
Philippines
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Philippine_peso
\(PHP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_peso?oldid=495411811
Philippine Peso
A phot (ph) is a photometric unit of illuminance, or luminous flux through an area. It is not an SI unit, but rather is associated with the older centimetre gram second system of units. Metric dimensions: \(illuminance = luminous intensity \times solid angle / length\).
10000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Phot
0112/2///62720#UAB255
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phot?oldid=477198725
ph
ph
Phot
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA928
pA
pA
C70
picoampere
Unavailable
0.001
pA.umol-1.L-1
Picoamps per micromole per litre
A PicoCoulomb is \(10^{-12} C\).
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA929
pC
pC
C71
PicoCoulomb
"PicoF" is a common unit of electric capacitance equal to \(10^{-12} farad\). This unit was formerly called the micromicrofarad.
0.000000000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Farad
0112/2///62720#UAA930
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farad?oldid=493070876
pF
pF
4T
Picofarad
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA931
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit farad divided by the SI base unit metre
pF.m-1
C72
Picofarad Per Meter
Picofarad Per Metre
10**-12 grams or one 10**-15 of the SI standard unit of mass (kilogram).
0.15
pg
Picograms
One part per 10**12 (trillion) by mass of the measurand in the matrix.
0.000000000001
pg.g-1
Picograms per gram
One part per 10**15 by mass of the measurand in the matrix.
0.15
pg.kg-1
Picograms per kilogram
One 10**15 part of the SI standard unit of mass of the measurand per litre volume of matrix..
0.000000000001
pg.L-1
Picofarad Per Meter
Picofarad Per Metre
Picograms per litre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA932
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit henry
pH
C73
Picohenry
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA949
0.000000000001-fold of the SI base unit metre
pm
C52
Picometer
Picometre
Unavailable
0.000000000001
pmol.kg-1
Picomoles per kilogram
Unavailable
0.000000001
pmol.L-1
Picomoles per litre
A change in the quantity of matter of 10^-12 moles in the SI unit of volume scaled by 10^-3 over a period of 86400 seconds.
0.0000000000000115740740740741
pmol.L-1.d-1
Picomoles per litre per day
A change in the quantity of matter of 10^-12 moles in the SI unit of volume scaled by 10^-3 over a period of 3600 seconds.
0.000000000000277777777777778
pmol.L-1.h-1
Picomoles per litre per hour
Unavailable
0.000000000001
pmol.m-1.W-1.s-1
Picomoles per metre per watt per second
Unavailable
0.0000000000000000115740740740741
pmol.m-2.d-1
Picomoles per square metre per day
Unavailable
0.000000000001
pmol.m-3
Picomoles per cubic metre
Unavailable
0.000000000001
pmol.m-3.s-1
Picomoles per cubic metre per second
0.000000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA933
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit pascal divided by the 1 000-fold of the SI base unit metre
pPa.km-1
H69
Picopascal Per Kilometer
Picopascal Per Kilometre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA934
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit Siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
pS.m-1
L42
Picosiemens Per Meter
Picosiemens Per Metre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA950
0.000000000001-fold of the SI base unit second
ps
H70
Picosecond
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA935
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit watt
pW
C75
Picowatt
The power (scaled by 10^-12) per SI unit of area (scaled by 10^-4) produced per SI unit of volume (scaled by 10^-3).
0.00001
pW.cm-2.L-1
Picowatts per square centimetre per litre
0.000000000001
0112/2///62720#UAA936
0.000000000001-fold of the SI derived unit watt divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 2
pW.m-2
C76
Picowatt Per Square Meter
Picowatt Per Square Metre
0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000261223
Planck Area
In physics, the Planck charge, denoted by, is one of the base units in the system of natural units called Planck units. It is a quantity of electric charge defined in terms of fundamental physical constants. The Planck charge is defined as: coulombs, where: is the speed of light in the vacuum, is Planck's constant, is the reduced Planck constant, is the permittivity of free space is the elementary charge = (137.03599911) is the fine structure constant. The Planck charge is times greater than the elementary charge \(e\) carried by an electron.
0.00000000000000000187554587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
\(Q_P\)
Planck Charge
The Planck current is the unit of electric current, denoted by IP, in the system of natural units known as Planck units. \(\approx 3.479 \times 10 A\), where: the Planck time is the permittivity in vacuum and the reduced Planck constant G is the gravitational constant c is the speed of light in vacuum. The Planck current is that current which, in a conductor, carries a Planck charge in Planck time. Alternatively, the Planck current is that constant current which, if maintained in two straight parallel conductors of infinite length and negligible circular cross-section, and placed a Planck length apart in vacuum, would produce between these conductors a force equal to a Planck force per Planck length.
34789000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_current
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_current?oldid=493640689
Planck Current
133177400000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
Planck Current Density
The Planck density is the unit of density, denoted by \(\rho_P\), in the system of natural units known as Planck units. \(1\ \rho_P \ is \approx 5.155 \times 10^{96} kg/m^3\). This is a unit which is very large, about equivalent to \(10^{23}\) solar masses squeezed into the space of a single atomic nucleus. At one unit of Planck time after the Big Bang, the mass density of the universe is thought to have been approximately one unit of Planck density.
5155000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_density
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_density?oldid=493642128
Planck Density
In physics, the unit of energy in the system of natural units known as Planck units is called the Planck energy, denoted by \(E_P\). \(E_P\) is a derived, as opposed to basic, Planck unit. An equivalent definition is:\(E_P = \hbar / T_P\) where \(T_P\) is the Planck time. Also: \(E_P = m_P c^2\) where \(m_P\) is the Planck mass.
1956100000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_energy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_energy?oldid=493639955
\(E_\rho = \sqrt{\frac{ \hbar c^5}{G}} \approx 1.936 \times 10^9 J \approx 1.22 \times 10^{28} eV \approx 0.5433 MWh\), where \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck's constant, and \(G\) is the gravitational constant.
Eᵨ
Planck Energy
Planck force is the derived unit of force resulting from the definition of the base Planck units for time, length, and mass. It is equal to the natural unit of momentum divided by the natural unit of time.
121027000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_force
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_force?oldid=493643031
Planck Force
18548700000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_angular_frequency
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_angular_frequency?oldid=493641308
Planck Frequency
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_angular_frequency
Planck Angular Frequency
The Planck impedance is the unit of electrical resistance, denoted by ZP, in the system of natural units known as Planck units. The Planck impedance is directly coupled to the impedance of free space, Z0, and differs in value from Z0 only by a factor of \(4\pi\). If the Planck charge were instead defined to normalize the permittivity of free space, \(\epsilon_0\), rather than the Coulomb constant, \(1/(4\pi\epsilon_0)\), then the Planck impedance would be identical to the characteristic impedance of free space.
29.9792458
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_impedance
\(Z_P = \frac{V_P}{I_P}= \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0c}=\frac{\mu_oc}{4\pi}=\frac{Z_0}{4\pi}=29.9792458\Omega\)\where \(V_P\) is the Planck voltage, \(I_P\) is the Planck current, \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\epsilon_0\) is the permittivity of free space, \(\mu_0\) is the permeability of free space, and \(Z_0\) is the impedance of free space.
ZP
Planck Impedance
In physics, the Planck length, denoted \(\ell_P\), is a unit of length, equal to \(1.616199(97)×10^{-35}\) metres. It is a base unit in the system of Planck units. The Planck length can be defined from three fundamental physical constants: the speed of light in a vacuum, Planck's constant, and the gravitational constant.
0.00000000000000000000000000000000001616252
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_length
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_length?oldid=495093067
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
\(\ell_P = \sqrt{\frac{ \hbar G}{c^3}} \approx 1.616199(97)) \times 10^{-35} m\), where \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck's constant, and \(G\) is the gravitational constant. The two digits enclosed by parentheses are the estimated standard error associated with the reported numerical value.
\(\ell_P\)
Planck Length
In physics, the Planck mass, denoted by \(m_P\), is the unit of mass in the system of natural units known as Planck units. It is defined so that \(\approx 1.2209 \times 10 GeV/c_0 = 2.17651(13) \times 10 kg\), (or \(21.7651 \mu g\)), where \(c_0\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(G\) is the gravitational constant, and \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck constant. Particle physicists and cosmologists often use the reduced Planck mass, which is \(\approx 4.341 \times 10 kg = 2.435 \times 10 GeV/c\). The added factor of \(1/{\sqrt{8\pi}}\) simplifies a number of equations in general relativity. Quantum effects are typified by the magnitude of Planck's constant.
0.0000000217644
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_mass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_mass?oldid=493648632
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
\(m_P = \sqrt{\frac{ \hbar c^3}{G}} \approx 1.2209 \times 10^{19} GeV/c^2 = 2.17651(13) \times 10^{-8}\), where \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck's constant, and \(G\) is the gravitational constant. The two digits enclosed by parentheses are the estimated standard error associated with the reported numerical value.
\(m_P\)
Planck Mass
Planck momentum is the unit of momentum in the system of natural units known as Planck units. It has no commonly used symbol of its own, but can be denoted by, where is the Planck mass and is the speed of light in a vacuum. Then where is the reduced Planck's constant, is the Planck length, is the gravitational constant. In SI units Planck momentum is \(\approx 6.5 kg m/s\).
6.52485
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_momentum
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_momentum?oldid=493644981
Planck Momentum
The Planck energy divided by the Planck time is the Planck power \(P_p \), equal to about \(3.62831 \times 10^{52} W\). This is an extremely large unit; even gamma-ray bursts, the most luminous phenomena known, have output on the order of \(1 \times 10^{45} W\), less than one ten-millionth of the Planck power.
36283100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_power
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_power?oldid=493642483
\(P_p = {\frac{ c^5}{G}}\), where \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, and \(G\) is the gravitational constant.
Planck Power
463309000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_pressure
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_pressure?oldid=493640883
Planck Pressure
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
PlanckTemperature
In physics, the Planck time, denoted by \(t_P\), is the unit of time in the system of natural units known as Planck units. It is the time required for light to travel, in a vacuum, a distance of 1 Planck length. The unit is named after Max Planck, who was the first to propose it. \( \\ t_P \equiv \sqrt{\frac{\hbar G}{c^5}} \approx 5.39106(32) \times 10^{-44} s\) where, \(c\) is the speed of light in a vacuum, \(\hbar\) is the reduced Planck's constant (defined as \(\hbar = \frac{h}{2 \pi}\) and \(G\) is the gravitational constant. The two digits between parentheses denote the standard error of the estimated value.
0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000539124
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Planck_time
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_time?oldid=495362103
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_units
\(t_P\)
Planck Time
1042950000000000000000000000.0
Planck Volt
0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000422419
Planck Volume
\(XPT\)
[oz_tr]{Pt}
Platinum (one Troy ounce)
United Kingdom
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pound_sterling
\(GBP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_sterling?oldid=495524329
Pound Sterling
Botswana
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pula
\(BWP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pula?oldid=495207177
Pula
0.0011365225
0112/2///62720#UAA963
unit of the volume for fluids according to the Imperial system of units
[qt_br]
QTI
Quart (UK)
0.0000000131542
0112/2///62720#UAA710
unit of the volume quart (UK liquid) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time day
[qt_br].d-1
K94
Quart (UK Liquid) Per Day
0.0000003157007
0112/2///62720#UAA711
unit of the volume quart (UK liquid) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[qt_br].h-1
K95
Quart (UK Liquid) Per Hour
0.00001894205
0112/2///62720#UAA712
unit of the volume quart (UK liquid) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[qt_br].min-1
K96
Quart (UK Liquid) Per Minute
0.0011365225
0112/2///62720#UAA713
unit of the volume quart (UK liquid) for fluids according to the Imperial system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[qt_br].h-1.s-1
K97
Quart (UK Liquid) Per Second
"US Liquid Quart" is a unit for 'Liquid Volume' expressed as \(qt\).
0.000946353
qt
[qt_us]
US Liquid Quart
0.00000001095316
0112/2///62720#UAA714
unit fo the volume quart (US liquid) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time day
[qt_us].d-1
K98
Quart (US Liquid) Per Day
0.000000262875833
0112/2///62720#UAA715
unit fo the volume quart (US liquid) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time hour
[qt_us].h-1
K99
Quart (US Liquid) Per Hour
0.00001577255
0112/2///62720#UAA716
unit fo the volume quart (US liquid) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit for time minute
[qt_us].min-1
L10
Quart (US Liquid) Per Minute
0.000946353
0112/2///62720#UAA717
unit fo the volume quart (US liquid) for fluids according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the SI base unit second
[qt_us].s-1
L11
Quart (US Liquid) Per Second
"US Dry Quart" is a unit for 'Dry Volume' expressed as \(dry_qt\).
0.001101220942715
dry_qt
[dqt_us]
US Dry Quart
A quad is a unit of energy equal to \(10 BTU\), or \(1.055 \times \SI{10}{\joule}\), which is \(1.055 exajoule\) or \(EJ\) in SI units. The unit is used by the U.S. Department of Energy in discussing world and national energy budgets. Some common types of an energy carrier approximately equal 1 quad are: 8,007,000,000 Gallons (US) of gasoline 293,083,000,000 Kilowatt-hours (kWh) 36,000,000 Tonnes of coal 970,434,000,000 Cubic feet of natural gas 5,996,000,000 UK gallons of diesel oil 25,200,000 Tonnes of oil 252,000,000 tonnes of TNT or five times the energy of the Tsar Bomba nuclear test.
1055000000000000000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Quad
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quad?oldid=492086827
quad
Quad
Qatar
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Qatari_riyal
\(QAR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qatari_riyal?oldid=491747452
Qatari Rial
12.70058636
0112/2///62720#UAB202
unit of the mass according to the avoirdupois system of units: 1 qr. l. = 28 lb
28.[lb_av]
QTR
Quarter (UK)
Guatemala
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Quetzal
\(GTQ\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quetzal?oldid=489813522
Quetzal
Not to be confused with roentgen equivalent man or roentgen equivalent physical. The roentgen (symbol R) is an obsolete unit of measurement for the kerma of X-rays and gamma rays up to 3 MeV.
0.000258
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Roentgen
0112/2///62720#UAA275
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roentgen?oldid=491213233
R
R
2C
Roentgen
The radian is the standard unit of angular measure, used in many areas of mathematics. It describes the plane angle subtended by a circular arc as the length of the arc divided by the radius of the arc. In the absence of any symbol radians are assumed, and when degrees are meant the symbol \(^{\ circ}\) is used.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Radian
<p>See NIST section <a href="http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec07.html#7.10">SP811 section7.10</a></p>
0112/2///62720#UAA966
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radian?oldid=492309312
The radian is the standard unit of angular measure, used in many areas of mathematics. It describes the plane angle subtended by a circular arc as the length of the arc divided by the radius of the arc. The unit was formerly a SI supplementary unit, but this category was abolished in 1995 and the radian is now considered a SI derived unit. The SI unit of solid angle measurement is the steradian. The radian is represented by the symbol "rad" or, more rarely, by the superscript c (for "circular measure"). For example, an angle of 1.2 radians would be written as "1.2 rad" or "1.2c" (the second symbol is often mistaken for a degree: "1.2u00b0"). As the ratio of two lengths, the radian is a "pure number" that needs no unit symbol, and in mathematical writing the symbol "rad" is almost always omitted. In the absence of any symbol radians are assumed, and when degrees are meant the symbol u00b0 is used. [Wikipedia]
rad
rad
C81
The radian and steradian are special names for the number one that may be used to convey information about the quantity concerned. In practice the symbols rad and sr are used where appropriate, but the symbol for the derived unit one is generally omitted in specifying the values of dimensionless quantities.
Radian
\(rad m^2 / kg\)
0112/2///62720#UAB162
rad.m2.kg-1
C83
Radian Square Meter per Kilogram
Radian Square Metre per Kilogram
\(rad m^2 / mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAB161
rad.m-2.mol-1
C82
Radian Square Meter per Mole
Radian Square Metre per Mole
"Radian per Hour" is a unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(rad/h\).
3600.0
\(rad/h\)
rad.h-1
rad/h
Radian per Hour
1.0
\(rad/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA967
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
rad.m-1
C84
Radian per Meter
Radian per Metre
Radian Per Minute (rad/min) is a unit in the category of Angular velocity. It is also known as radians per minute, radian/minute. Radian Per Minute (rad/min) has a dimension of aT-1 where T is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit rad/s by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.0166666666667.
60.0
\(rad/m\)
rad.min-1
rad/min
Radian per Minute
"Radian per Second" is the SI unit of rotational speed (angular velocity), and, also the unit of angular frequency. The radian per second is defined as the change in the orientation of an object, in radians, every second.
1.0
\(rad/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA968
rad.s-1
rad/s
2A
radian per second
Angular acceleration is the rate of change of angular velocity. In SI units, it is measured in radians per Square second (\(rad/s^2\)), and is usually denoted by the Greek letter \(\alpha\).
1.0
\(rad/s2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA969
rad.s-2
rad/s2
2B
Radian per Square Second
The \(rad\) is a deprecated unit of absorbed radiation dose, defined as \(1 rad = 0.01\,Gy = 0.01 J/kg\). It was originally defined in CGS units in 1953 as the dose causing 100 ergs of energy to be absorbed by one gram of matter. It has been replaced by the gray in most of the world. A related unit, the \(roentgen\), was formerly used to quantify the number of rad deposited into a target when it was exposed to radiation. The F-factor can used to convert between rad and roentgens. The material absorbing the radiation can be human tissue or silicon microchips or any other medium (for example, air, water, lead shielding, etc.).
0.01
http://dbpedia.org/resource/RAD
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAD?oldid=493716376
rad
RAD
Rad
dcterms:description "\(\textbf{Rayl}\) is one of two units of specific acoustic impedance. When sound waves pass through any physical substance the pressure of the waves causes the particles of the substance to move. The sound specific impedance is the ratio between the sound pressure and the particle velocity it produces. The specific impedance is one rayl if unit pressure produces unit velocity. It is defined as follows: \(1\; rayl = 1 dyn\cdot s\cdot cm^{-3}\) Or in SI as: \(1 \; rayl = 10^{-1}Pa\cdot s\cdot m^{-1}\), which equals \(10\,N \cdot s\cdot m^{-3}\)."""^^qudt:LatexString ;
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Rayl
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayl?oldid=433570842
Rayl
A Rem is a deprecated unit used to measure the biological effects of ionizing radiation. The rem is defined as equal to 0.01 sievert, which is the more commonly used unit outside of the United States. Equivalent dose, effective dose, and committed dose can all be measured in units of rem. These quantities are products of the absorbed dose in rads and weighting factors. These factors must be selected for each exposure situation; there is no universally applicable conversion constant from rad to rem. A rem is a large dose of radiation, so the millirem (mrem), which is one thousandth of a rem, is often used for the dosages commonly encountered, such as the amount of radiation received from medical x-rays and background sources.
0.01
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roentgen_equivalent_man
rem
REM
Rem
"Revolution" is a unit for 'Plane Angle' expressed as \(rev\).
6.28318531
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Revolution
0112/2///62720#UAB206
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolution?oldid=494110330
rev
{#}
Revolution
"Revolution per Hour" is a unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(rev/h\).
0.00174532925
\(rev/h\)
{#}.h-1
Revolution per Hour
"Revolution per Minute" is a unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(rev/min\).
0.104719755
\(rev/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAB231
{#}.min-1
Revolution per Minute
"Revolution per Second" is a unit for 'Angular Velocity' expressed as \(rev/s\).
6.28318531
\(rev/s\)
{#}.s-1
Revolution per Second
"Revolution per Square Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Angular Acceleration' expressed as \(rev-per-s^2\).
6.28318531
\(rev/s2\)
{#}.s-2
Revolution per Square Second
A unit of distance equal to 5.5 yards (16 feet 6 inches).
5.02921
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Rod
\(rd\)
0112/2///62720#UAA970
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rod?oldid=492590086
[rd_br]
F49
Rod
The register ton is a unit of volume used for the cargo capacity of a ship, defined as 100 cubic feet (roughly 2.83 cubic metres).
2.8316846592
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonnage#Tonnage_measurements
RT
100.[cft_i]
Register Ton
Cambodia
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Riel
\(KHR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riel?oldid=473309240
Riel
Romania
2
\(RON\)
Romanian New Leu
Maldives
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Maldivian_rufiyaa
\(MVR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maldivian_rufiyaa?oldid=491578728
Rufiyaa
Indonesia
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Indonesian_rupiah
\(IDR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesian_rupiah?oldid=489729458
Rupiah
Russia, Abkhazia, South Ossetia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Russian_ruble
\(RUB\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_ruble?oldid=494336467
Russian Ruble
Rwanda
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Rwandan_franc
\(RWF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rwandan_franc?oldid=489727903
Rwanda Franc
\(\textbf{Siemens}\) is the SI unit of electric conductance, susceptance, and admittance. The most important property of a conductor is the amount of current it will carry when a voltage is applied. Current flow is opposed by resistance in all circuits, and by also by reactance and impedance in alternating current circuits. Conductance, susceptance, and admittance are the inverses of resistance, reactance, and impedance, respectively. To measure these properties, the siemens is the reciprocal of the ohm. In other words, the conductance, susceptance, or admittance, in siemens, is simply 1 divided by the resistance, reactance or impedance, respectively, in ohms. The unit is named for the German electrical engineer Werner von Siemens (1816-1892). \(\ \text{Siemens}\equiv\frac{\text{A}}{\text{V}}\equiv\frac{\text{amp}}{\text{volt}}\equiv\frac{\text{F}}{\text {s}}\equiv\frac{\text{farad}}{\text{second}}\)
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA277
http://www.simetric.co.uk/siderived.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siemens_(unit)
A/V
S
S
SIE
Siemens
\(s-m2-per-mol\)
0112/2///62720#UAA280
S.m2.mol-1
D12
Siemens Square meter per mole
Siemens Square metre per mole
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAA278
SI derived unit Siemens divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
S.cm-2
H43
Siemens Per Centimeter
Siemens Per Centimetre
1.0
\(s-per-m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA279
SI derived unit siemens divided by the SI base unit metre
S.m-1
S/m
D10
Siemens Per Meter
Siemens Per Metre
The number of discrete samples of some thing per second.
\(sample-per-sec\)
s-1
Sample per second
The \(Second\) (symbol: \(s\)) is the base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI) and is also a unit of time in other systems of measurement. Between the years1000 (when al-Biruni used seconds) and 1960 the second was defined as \(1/86400\) of a mean solar day (that definition still applies in some astronomical and legal contexts). Between 1960 and 1967, it was defined in terms of the period of the Earth's orbit around the Sun in 1900, but it is now defined more precisely in atomic terms.
Under the International System of Units (via the International Committee for Weights and Measures, or CIPM), since 1967 the second has been defined as the duration of \({9192631770}\) periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom.In 1997 CIPM added that the periods would be defined for a caesium atom at rest, and approaching the theoretical temperature of absolute zero, and in 1999, it included corrections from ambient radiation.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Second
0112/2///62720#UAA972
0112/2///62720#UAD722
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second?oldid=495241006
s
s
SEC
Second
"Second Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Area Time' expressed as \(s-ft^{2}\).
0.09290304
\(s-ft^2\)
s.[ft_i]2
s.[sft_i]
Second Square Foot
Unavailable
1.0
s.m-1
Seconds per metre
\(sec/rad-m^3\)
0112/2///62720#UAB352
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
s.
D93
Second per Radian Cubic Meter
Second per Radian Cubic Metre
"Square Second" is a unit for 'Square Time' expressed as \(s^{2}\).
1.0
\(s^2\)
s2
Square Second
A shake is an informal unit of time equal to 10 nanoseconds. It has applications in nuclear physics, helping to conveniently express the timing of various events in a nuclear explosion. The typical time required for one step in the chain reaction (i.e. the typical time for each neutron to cause a fission event which releases more neutrons) is of order 1 shake, and the chain reaction is typically complete by 50 to 100 shakes.
0.00000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shake
0112/2///62720#UAB226
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shake?oldid=494796779
Sh
10.ns
Shake
The "Shannon" is a unit of information.
1.0
\(Sh\)
0112/2///62720#UAB343
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_(information)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
Shannon
The "Shannon per Second" is a unit of information rate.
1.0
\(Sh/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAB346
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_(information)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31898
Shannon per Second
The slug is a unit of mass associated with Imperial units. It is a mass that accelerates by \(1 ft/s\) when a force of one pound-force (\(lbF\)) is exerted on it. With standard gravity \(gc = 9.80665 m/s\), the international foot of \(0.3048 m\) and the avoirdupois pound of \(0.45359237 kg\), one slug therefore has a mass of approximately \(32.17405 lbm\) or \(14.593903 kg\). At the surface of the Earth, an object with a mass of 1 slug exerts a force of about \(32.17 lbF\) or \(143 N\).
14.593903
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Slug
0112/2///62720#UAA978
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slug?oldid=495010998
slug
F13
Slug
0.00016891087963
0112/2///62720#UAA979
unit slug for mass according to an English engineering system divided by the unit day
L63
Slug Per Day
"Slug per Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Length' expressed as \(slug/ft\).
47.8802591863517
\(slug/ft\)
Slug per Foot
\(\textbf{Slug per Foot Second} is a unit for 'Dynamic Viscosity' expressed as \(slug/(ft-s)\).
47.8802591863517
\(slug/(ft-s)\)
0112/2///62720#UAA980
L64
Slug per Foot Second
"Slug per Square Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Area' expressed as \(slug/ft^{2}\).
157.08746452215124
\(slug/ft^{2}\)
Slug per Square Foot
"Slug per Cubic Foot" is an Imperial unit for 'Density' expressed as \(slug/ft^{3}\).
515.3788206107324
\(slug/ft^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA981
L65
Slug per Cubic Foot
0.004053861111111
0112/2///62720#UAA982
unit slug for mass slug according to the English engineering system divided by the unit hour
L66
Slug Per Hour
0.243231666666667
0112/2///62720#UAA983
unit slug for the mass according to the English engineering system divided by the unit minute
L67
Slug Per Minute
"Slug per Second" is an Imperial unit for 'Mass Per Time' expressed as \(slug/s\).
14.593903
\(slug/s\)
0112/2///62720#UAA984
L68
Slug per Second
The steradian (symbol: sr) is the SI unit of solid angle. It is used to describe two-dimensional angular spans in three-dimensional space, analogous to the way in which the radian describes angles in a plane. The radian and steradian are special names for the number one that may be used to convey information about the quantity concerned. In practice the symbols rad and sr are used where appropriate, but the symbol for the derived unit one is generally omitted in specifying the values of dimensionless quantities.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steradian
0112/2///62720#UAA986
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steradian?oldid=494317847
sr
sr
D27
Steradian
\(\textbf{Stokes (St)}\) is a unit in the category of Kinematic viscosity. This unit is commonly used in the cgs unit system. Stokes (St) has a dimension of \(L^2T^{-1}\) where \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. It can be converted to the corresponding standard SI unit \(m^2/s\) by multiplying its value by a factor of 0.0001.
0.0001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stokes
0112/2///62720#UAA281
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stokes?oldid=426159512
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--kinematic_viscosity--stokes.cfm
\((cm^2/s\))
St
v
St
91
Stokes
\(The \textit{stilb (sb)} is the CGS unit of luminance for objects that are not self-luminous. It is equal to one candela per square centimeter or 10 nits (candelas per square meter). The name was coined by the French physicist A. Blondel around 1920. It comes from the Greek word stilbein meaning 'to glitter'. It was in common use in Europe up to World War I. In North America self-explanatory terms such as candle per square inch and candle per square meter were more common. The unit has since largely been replaced by the SI unit: candela per square meter.\)
10000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stilb
0112/2///62720#UAB260
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stilb?oldid=375748497
sb
sb
Stilb
The stere is a unit of volume in the original metric system equal to one cubic metre. The stere is typically used for measuring large quantities of firewood or other cut wood, while the cubic meter is used for uncut wood. It is not part of the modern metric system (SI). In Dutch there's also a kuub, short for kubieke meter which is similar but different.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/St%C3%A8re
0112/2///62720#UAA987
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stère?oldid=393570287
st
st
G26
Stere
1.0
\chi_{\text{e}} = \frac{{\mathbf P}}{\varepsilon_0{\mathbf E}}
Electric susceptibility is a dimensionless proportionality constant that indicates the degree of polarization of a dielectric material in response to an applied electric field. Here P = epsilon_0 * chi_e * E. Where epsilon_0 is the electric permittivity of free space (electric constant), P is the polarization density of the material chi_e is the electric susceptibility and E is the electric field.
Electric Susceptibility Unit
1.0
\chi_\text{v} = \frac{\mathbf{M}}{\mathbf{H}}
Magnetic susceptibility is a dimensionless proportionality constant that indicates the degree of magnetization of a material in response to an applied magnetic field. Here M = chi * H. Where M is the magnetization of the material (the magnetic dipole moment per unit volume), measured in amperes per meter, and H is the magnetic field strength, also measured in amperes per meter. Chi is therefore a dimensionless quantity.
Magnetic Susceptibility Unit
Although the sievert has the same dimensions as the gray (i.e. joules per kilogram), it measures a different quantity. To avoid any risk of confusion between the absorbed dose and the equivalent dose, the corresponding special units, namely the gray instead of the joule per kilogram for absorbed dose and the sievert instead of the joule per kilogram for the dose equivalent, should be used.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sievert
0112/2///62720#UAA284
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sievert?oldid=495474333
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1284
J/kg
Sv
Sv
D13
Sievert
The CGS electromagnetic unit of conductance; one absiemen is the conductance at which a potential of one abvolt forces a current of one abampere; equal to \(10^{9}\) siemens. One siemen is the conductance at which a potential of one volt forces a current of one ampere and named for Karl Wilhem Siemens.
1000000000.0
http://wordinfo.info/unit/4266
aS
GS
Absiemen
The unit of conductance, admittance, and susceptance in the centimeter-gram-second electrostatic system of units.
0.0000000000011126500561
http://www.knowledgedoor.com/2/units_and_constants_handbook/statsiemens.html
http://www.sizes.com/units/statmho.htm
http://www3.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=statsiemens
statS
Statsiemens
statmho
Saint Helena
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Saint_Helena_pound
\(SHP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Helena_pound?oldid=490152057
Saint Helena Pound
Samoa
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Samoan_tala
\(WST\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samoan_tala?oldid=423898531
Samoan Tala
Saudi Arabia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Saudi_riyal
\(SAR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_riyal?oldid=491092981
Saudi Riyal
Serbia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Serbian_dinar
\(RSD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_dinar?oldid=495146650
Serbian Dinar
Seychelles
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Seychellois_rupee
\(SCR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seychellois_rupee?oldid=492242185
Seychelles Rupee
\(XAG\)
[oz_tr](Ag}
Silver (one Troy ounce)
Singapore
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Singapore_dollar
\(SGD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singapore_dollar?oldid=492228311
Singapore Dollar
Slovakia
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Slovak_koruna
\(SKK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovak_koruna?oldid=492625951
Slovak Koruna
The astronomical unit of mass is the solar mass.The symbol \(S\) is often used in astronomy to refer to this unit, although \(M_{\odot}\) is also common. The solar mass, \(1.98892 \time 1030 kg\), is a standard way to express mass in astronomy, used to describe the masses of other stars and galaxies. It is equal to the mass of the Sun, about 333,000 times the mass of the Earth or 1,048 times the mass of Jupiter. In practice, the masses of celestial bodies appear in the dynamics of the solar system only through the products GM, where G is the constant of gravitation.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Solar_mass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_mass?oldid=494074016
S
Solar mass
Solomon Islands
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Solomon_Islands_dollar
\(SBD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Islands_dollar?oldid=490313285
Solomon Islands Dollar
Kyrgyzstan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Som
\(KGS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Som?oldid=495411674
Som
Somalia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Somali_shilling
\(SOS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somali_shilling?oldid=494434126
Somali Shilling
Tajikistan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tajikistani_somoni
\(TJS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tajikistani_somoni?oldid=492500781
Somoni
South Africa
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/South_African_rand
\(ZAR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_rand?oldid=493780395
South African Rand
South Korea
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/South_Korean_won
\(KRW\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Korean_won?oldid=494404062
South Korean Won
International Monetary Fund
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Special_Drawing_Rights
\(XDR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Drawing_Rights?oldid=467224374
Special Drawing Rights
Sri Lanka
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sri_Lankan_rupee
\(LKR\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Lankan_rupee?oldid=495359963
Sri Lanka Rupee
4.672
0112/2///62720#UAB116
non SI-conform unit of the volume of readily finished wood material : 1 standard = 1,980 board feet or approximate 4.672 cubic metre
1980.[bf_i]
WSD
Standard
6.35029318
0112/2///62720#UAB081
unit of the mass which is commonly used for the determination of the weight of living beings regarding to the conversion to the avoirdupois system of units: 1 st = 14 lb (av)
[stone_av]
STI
Stone (UK)
Sudan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sudanese_pound
\(SDG\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudanese_pound?oldid=495263707
Sudanese Pound
Suriname
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Surinamese_dollar
\(SRD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surinamese_dollar?oldid=490316270
Surinam Dollar
Sweden
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Swedish_krona
\(SEK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_krona?oldid=492703602
Swedish Krona
Switzerland, Liechtenstein
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Swiss_franc
\(CHF\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_franc?oldid=492548706
Swiss Franc
Syria
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Syrian_pound
\(SYP\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrian_pound?oldid=484294722
Syrian Pound
The SI unit of flux density (or field intensity) for magnetic fields (also called the magnetic induction). The intensity of a magnetic field can be measured by placing a current-carrying conductor in the field. The magnetic field exerts a force on the conductor, a force which depends on the amount of the current and on the length of the conductor. One tesla is defined as the field intensity generating one newton of force per ampere of current per meter of conductor. Equivalently, one tesla represents a magnetic flux density of one weber per square meter of area. A field of one tesla is quite strong: the strongest fields available in laboratories are about 20 teslas, and the Earth's magnetic flux density, at its surface, is about 50 microteslas. The tesla, defined in 1958, honors the Serbian-American electrical engineer Nikola Tesla (1856-1943), whose work in electromagnetic induction led to the first practical generators and motors using alternating current. \(T = V\cdot s \cdot m^{-2} = N\cdot A^{-1}\cdot m^{-1} = Wb\cdot m^{-1} = kg \cdot C^{-1}\cdot s^{-1}\cdot A^{-1} = kg \cdot s^{-2}\cdot A^{-1} = N \cdot s \cdot C^{-1}\cdot m^{-1}\) where, \(\\\) \(A\) = ampere, \(C\)=coulomb, \(m\) = meter, \(N\) = newton, \(s\) = second, \(T\) = tesla, \(Wb\) = weber
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tesla
0112/2///62720#UAA285
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla?oldid=481198244
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_(unit)
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1406?rskey=AzXBLd
Wb/m^2
T
T
D33
Tesla
T.m
T-M
T.s
T-SEC
In the US and parts of Canada, a tablespoon is the largest type of spoon used for eating from a bowl. In the UK and most Commonwealth countries, a tablespoon is a type of large spoon usually used for serving. In countries where a tablespoon is a serving spoon, the nearest equivalent to the US tablespoon is either the dessert spoon or the soup spoon. A tablespoonful, nominally the capacity of one tablespoon, is commonly used as a measure of volume in cooking. It is abbreviated as T, tb, tbs, tbsp, tblsp, or tblspn. The capacity of ordinary tablespoons is not regulated by law and is subject to considerable variation. In most countries one level tablespoon is approximately 15 mL; in Australia it is 20 mL.
0.0000147867656
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tablespoon
0112/2///62720#UAB006
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablespoon?oldid=494615208
tbsp
[tbs_us]
G24
Tablespoon
<p>\textit{Tex</em> is a unit of measure for the linear mass density of fibers and is defined as the mass in grams per 1000 meters. Tex is more likely to be used in Canada and Continental Europe, while denier remains more common in the United States and United Kingdom. The unit code is 'tex'. The most commonly used unit is actually the decitex, abbreviated dtex, which is the mass in grams per 10,000 meters. When measuring objects that consist of multiple fibers the term 'filament tex' is sometimes used, referring to the mass in grams per 1000 meters of a single filament. Tex is used for measuring fiber size in many products, including cigarette filters, optical cable, yarn, and fabric.}
0.000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tex
0112/2///62720#UAB246
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tex?oldid=457265525
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Units_of_textile_measurement
tex
tex
D34
Tex
Thailand
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thai_baht
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_baht?oldid=493286022
Baht
\(therm-eec\)
100000.[Btu_IT]
THM_EEC
\(\textbf{Therm} (symbol \(thm\)) is a non-SI unit of heat energy. It was defined in the United States in 1968 as the energy equivalent of burning 100 cubic feet of natural gas at standard temperature and pressure. In the US gas industry its SI equivalent is defined as exactly \(100,000 BTU59^\circ F\) or \(105.4804 megajoules\). Public utilities in the U.S. use the therm unit for measuring customer usage of gas and calculating the monthly bills.
105480400.0
http://www.convertunits.com/info/therm%2B%5BU.S.%5D
thm
100000.[Btu_59]
Therm US
<p>The tonne of oil equivalent (toe) is a unit of energy: the amount of energy released by burning one tonne of crude oil, approximately 42 GJ (as different crude oils have different calorific values, the exact value of the toe is defined by convention; unfortunately there are several slightly different definitions as discussed below). The toe is sometimes used for large amounts of energy, as it can be more intuitive to visualise, say, the energy released by burning 1000 tonnes of oil than 42,000 billion joules (the SI unit of energy). Multiples of the toe are used, in particular the megatoe (Mtoe, one million toe) and the gigatoe (Gtoe, one billion toe).</p>
41868000000.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonne_of_oil_equivalent
toe
Ton of Oil Equivalent
1000.0
1,000-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
t
TN
Tonne
0.011574074074074
0112/2///62720#UAA991
metric unit tonne divided by the unit for time day
t.d-1
L71
Tonne Per Day
0.1
A measure of density equivalent to 1000kg per hectare or one Megagram per hectare, typically used to express a volume of biomass or crop yield.
t/ha
t.har-1
tonne per hectare
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA997
unit tonne divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
t.m-3
D41
Tonne Per Cubic Meter
Tonne Per Cubic Metre
16.666666666666668
0112/2///62720#UAB000
unit tonne divided by the unit for time minute
t.min-1
L78
Tonne Per Minute
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB003
unit tonne divided by the SI base unit second
t.s-1
L81
Tonne Per Second
In the United States, a unit of mass, approximately \(29.167\, grams\). The number of milligrams of precious metal in one assay ton of the ore being tested is equal to the number of troy ounces of pure precious metal in one 2000-pound ton of the ore. i.e. a bead is obtained that weights 3 milligrams, thus the precious metals in the bead would equal three troy ounces to each ton of ore with the understanding that this varies considerably in the real world as the amount of precious values in each ton of ore varies considerably.
0.02916667
http://www.assaying.org/assayton.htm
AT
Assay Ton
12000 btu per hour</p>
3516.853
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ton_of_refrigeration
\(t/fg\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ton_of_refrigeration?oldid=494342824
Ton of Refrigeration
8896.443230521
0112/2///62720#UAB021
unit of the force according to the American system of units
[stonf_av]
L94
Ton Force (US Short)
Long ton (weight ton or imperial ton) is the name for the unit called the "ton" in the avoirdupois or Imperial system of measurements, as used in the United Kingdom and several other Commonwealth countries. One long ton is equal to 2,240 pounds (1,016 kg), 1.12 times as much as a short ton, or 35 cubic feet (0.9911 m3) of salt water with a density of 64 lb/ft3 (1.025 g/ml).</p>
<p>It has some limited use in the United States, most commonly in measuring the displacement of ships, and was the unit prescribed for warships by the Washington Naval Treaty 1922-for example battleships were limited to a mass of 35,000 long tons (36,000 t; 39,000 short tons).</p>
1016.0469088
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_ton
ton
[lton_av]
Long Ton
The long ton per cubic yard density measurement unit is used to measure volume in cubic yards in order to estimate weight or mass in long tons.
1328.9391836174336
\(ton/yd^3\)
[lton_av]/[cyd_i]
Long Ton per Cubic Yard
The tonne (SI unit symbol: t) is a metric system unit of mass equal to 1,000 kilograms (2,204.6 pounds). It is a non-SI unit accepted for use with SI. To avoid confusion with the ton, it is also known as the metric tonne and metric ton in the United States[3] and occasionally in the United Kingdom. In SI units and prefixes, the tonne is a megagram (Mg), a rarely-used symbol, easily confused with mg, for milligram.
1000.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tonne
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonne?oldid=492526238
1,000-fold of the SI base unit kilogram
mT
t
TN
Metric Ton
metric-tonne
0.011574074074074
0112/2///62720#UAA991
metric unit ton divided by the unit for time day
t.d-1
L71
Tonne Per Day
0.1
A measure of density equivalent to 1000kg per hectare or one Megagram per hectare, typically used to express a volume of biomass or crop yield.
t/ha
t.har-1
metric tonne per hectare
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA997
unit tonne divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
t.m-3
D41
Tonne Per Cubic Meter
Tonne Per Cubic Metre
16.666666666666668
0112/2///62720#UAB000
unit ton divided by the unit for time minute
t.min-1
L78
Tonne Per Minute
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB003
unit ton divided by the SI base unit second
t.s-1
L81
Tonne Per Second (metric Ton)
1.1326
0112/2///62720#UAB011
traditional unit for volume of cargo, especially in shipping
L86
Ton (US Shipping)
<p>The short ton is a unit of mass equal to 2,000 pounds (907.18474 kg). In the United States it is often called simply ton without distinguishing it from the metric ton (tonne, 1,000 kilograms / 2,204.62262 pounds) or the long ton (2,240 pounds / 1,016.0469088 kilograms); rather, the other two are specifically noted. There are, however, some U.S. applications for which unspecified tons normally means long tons.</p>
907.18474
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_ton
ton
[ston_av]
Short Ton
The short Ton per Hour is a unit used to express a weight processed in a period of time.
0.251995761
\(ton/hr\)
[ston_av].h-1
Short Ton per Hour
The short ton per cubic yard density measurement unit is used to measure volume in cubic yards in order to estimate weight or mass in short tons.
1186.552842515566
\(ton/yd^3\)
[ston_av].[cyd_i]-1
Short Ton per Cubic Yard
1016.0
0112/2///62720#UAB008
0112/2///62720#UAB009
traditional Imperial unit for volume of cargo, especially in the shipping sector
[lton_av]
L84
LTN
Ton (UK)
0.011759259259259
0112/2///62720#UAB010
unit British ton according to the Imperial system of units divided by the unit day
[lton_av].d-1
L85
Long Ton (uk) Per Day
1328.8778292234224
0112/2///62720#UAB018
unit of the density according the Imperial system of units
[lton_av].[cyd_i]-1
L92
Long Ton (UK) Per Cubic Yard
907.1847
0112/2///62720#UAB012
unit of the mass according to the Anglo-American system of units
[ston_av]
STN
Ton (US)
0.010497685185185
0112/2///62720#UAB014
unit American ton according to the Anglo-American system of units divided by the unit day
[ston_av].d-1
L88
Short Ton (us) Per Day
0.251944444444444
0112/2///62720#UAA994
0112/2///62720#UAB019
unit ton divided by the unit for time hour
[ston_av].h-1
4W
E18
Ton (US) Per Hour
1186.3112117181538
0112/2///62720#UAB020
unit of the density according to the Anglo-American system of units
[ston_av].[cyd_i]-1
L93
Short Ton (US) Per Cubic Yard
<p>The \textit{torr} is a non-SI unit of pressure with the ratio of 760 to 1 standard atmosphere, chosen to be roughly equal to the fluid pressure exerted by a millimeter of mercury, i.e. , a pressure of 1 torr is approximately equal to one millimeter of mercury. Note that the symbol (Torr) is spelled exactly the same as the unit (torr), but the letter case differs. The unit is written lower-case, while the symbol of the unit (Torr) is capitalized (as upper-case), as is customary in metric units derived from names. Thus, it is correctly written either way, and is only incorrect when specification is first made that the word is being used as a unit, or else a symbol of the unit, and then the incorrect letter case for the specified use is employed.</p>
133.322
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Torr
0112/2///62720#UAB022
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torr?oldid=495199381
Torr
Torr
UA
Torr
A teaspoon is a unit of volume. In the United States one teaspoon as a unit of culinary measure is \(1/3\) tablespoon , that is, \(\approx 4.93 mL\); it is exactly \(1/6 U.S. fl. oz\), \(1/48 \; cup\), and \(1/768 \; U.S. liquid gallon\) (see United States customary units for relative volumes of these other measures) and approximately \(1/3 cubic inch\). For nutritional labeling on food packages in the U.S., the teaspoon is defined as precisely \(5 mL\).
0.00000492892187
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Teaspoon
0112/2///62720#UAB007
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teaspoon?oldid=490940468
tsp
[tsp_us]
G25
Teaspoon
The unit of magnetic induction in the cgs system, \(10^{-4}\,tesla\). Also known as the gauss.
0.0001
http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/source/g/a/gauss/source.html
abT
Abtesla
Tanzania
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tanzanian_shilling
\(TZS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanzanian_shilling?oldid=492257527
Tanzanian Shilling
The tebibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The prefix tebi means 1024^4
6096987078286.4836024230149744713
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tebibyte
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Multiple-byte_units
TiB
TebiByte
Kazakhstan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kazakhstani_tenge
\(KZT\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazakhstani_tenge?oldid=490523058
Tenge
The terabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The prefix tera means 10^12 in the International System of Units (SI), and therefore 1 terabyte is 1000000000000bytes, or 1 trillion bytes, or 1000 gigabytes. 1 terabyte in binary prefixes is 0.9095 tebibytes, or 931.32 gibibytes. The unit symbol for the terabyte is TB or TByte, but not Tb (lower case b) which refers to terabit.
5545177444479.5624753378569716654
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Terabyte
0112/2///62720#UAB186
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terabyte?oldid=494671550
TB
TBy
E35
TeraByte
A TeraCoulomb is \(10^{12} C\).
1000000000000.0
TC
TC
TeraCoulomb
1000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA287
1 000 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit hertz
THz
D29
Terahertz
1000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA288
1 000 000 000 000-fold of the SI derived unit joule
TJ
D30
Terajoule
1000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA286
1,000,000,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit ohm
TOhm
H44
Teraohm
1000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA289
1,000,000,000,000-fold of the SI derived unit watt
TW
D31
Terawatt
3600000000000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA290
1,000,000,000,000-fold of the product of the SI derived unit watt and the unit hour
TW/h
D32
Terawatt Hour
Energy equivalent of one ton of TNT
4184000000.0
\(t/lbf\)
Gcal
Ton Energy
Trinidad and Tobago
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Trinidad_and_Tobago_dollar
\(TTD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinidad_and_Tobago_dollar?oldid=490325306
Trinidad and Tobago Dollar
Mongolia
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mongolian_t%C3%B6gr%C3%B6g
\(MNT\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_tögrög?oldid=495408271
Tugrik
Tunisia
3
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tunisian_dinar
\(TND\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisian_dinar?oldid=491218035
Tunisian Dinar
The unified atomic mass unit (symbol: \(u\)) or dalton (symbol: \(Da\)) is the standard unit that is used for indicating mass on an atomic or molecular scale (atomic mass). It is defined as one twelfth of the mass of an unbound neutral atom of carbon-12 in its nuclear and electronic ground state,[ and has a value of \(1.660538921(73) \times 10^{-27} kg\). One dalton is approximately equal to the mass of one nucleon; an equivalence of saying \(1 g mol^{-1}\). The CIPM have categorised it as a 'non-SI unit' because units values in SI units must be obtained experimentally.
0.00000000000000000000000000166053878283
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Atomic_mass_unit
0112/2///62720#UAB083
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_mass_unit
u
u
D43
Unified Atomic Mass Unit
United Arab Emirates
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_Arab_Emirates_dirham
\(AED\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Arab_Emirates_dirham?oldid=491806142
United Arab Emirates dirham
International Union of Railways
\(XFU\)
UIC franc (special settlement currency)
An explicit unit to say something has no units.
1.0
U
Unitless
American Samoa, British Indian Ocean Territory, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guam, Haiti, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, Panama, Puerto Rico, East Timor, Turks and Caicos Islands, United States, Virgin Islands
2
US$
US Dollar
United States
2
\(USN\)
United States Dollar (next day) (funds code)
United States
2
United States Dollar (same day) (funds code)
Uganda
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ugandan_shilling
\(UGX\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ugandan_shilling?oldid=495383966
Uganda Shilling
Colombia
2
\(COU\)
Unidad de Valor Real
Chile
0
\(CLF\)
Unidades de formento (Funds code)
A magnetic pole is a unit pole if it exerts a force of one dyne on another pole of equal strength at a distance of 1 cm. The strength of any given pole in cgs units is therefore numerically equal to the force in dynes which it exerts on a unit pole 1 cm away.
0.0000001256637
\(U/nWb\)
0112/2///62720#UAB214
Unit Pole
Uruguay
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uruguayan_peso
\(UYU\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uruguayan_peso?oldid=487528781
Peso Uruguayo
Uzbekistan
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uzbekistani_som
\(UZS\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbekistani_som?oldid=490522228
Uzbekistan Som
\(\textit{Volt} is the SI unit of electric potential. Separating electric charges creates potential energy, which can be measured in energy units such as joules. Electric potential is defined as the amount of potential energy present per unit of charge. Electric potential is measured in volts, with one volt representing a potential of one joule per coulomb of charge. The name of the unit honors the Italian scientist Count Alessandro Volta (1745-1827), the inventor of the first battery. The volt also may be expressed with a variety of other units. For example, a volt is also equal to one watt per ampere (W/A) and one joule per ampere per second (J/A/s).\)
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Volt
0112/2///62720#UAA296
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volt?oldid=494812083
\(\text{V}\ \equiv\ \text{volt}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{J}}{\text{C}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{joule}}{\text{coulomb}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{W.s}}{\text{C}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{watt.second}}{\text{coulomb}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{W}}{\text{A}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{watt}}{\text{amp}}\)
W/A
V
V
VLT
Volt
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA298
product of the SI derived unit volt and the SI base unit ampere
V.A
D46
Volt Ampere
3600.0
product of the unit for apparent by ampere and the unit hour
V.A.h
Volt Ampere Hour
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB023
unit with special name for reactive power
V.A{reactive}
D44
Volt Ampere Reactive
3600.0
product of the unit volt ampere reactive and the unit hour
V.A{reactive}.h
Volt Ampere Reactive Hour
V.m
V-M
100.0
0112/2///62720#UAB054
derived SI unit volt divided by the 0.01-fold of the SI base unit metre
V.cm-1
D47
Volt Per Centimeter
Volt Per Centimetre
39.37007874015748
0112/2///62720#UAA300
SI derived unit volt divided by the unit inch according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units
V.[in_i]-1
H23
Volt Per Inch
\(v/k\)
0112/2///62720#UAB173
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
V.K-1
D48
Volt per Kelvin
Volt Per Meter (V/m) is a unit in the category of Electric field strength. It is also known as volts per meter, volt/meter, volt/metre, volt per metre, volts per metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Volt Per Meter (V/m) has a dimension of \(MLT^{-3}I^{-1}\) where M is mass, L is length, T is time, and I is electric current. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(V/m\)
0112/2///62720#UAA301
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_field_strength--volt_per_meter.cfm
V.m-1
D50
Volt per Meter
Volt per Metre
The divergence at a particular point in a vector field is (roughly) how much the vector field 'spreads out' from that point. Operationally, we take the partial derivative of each of the field with respect to each of its space variables and add all the derivatives together to get the divergence. Electric field (V/m) differentiated with respect to distance (m) yields \(V/(m^2)\).
1.0
\(V m^{-2}\)
http://www.funtrivia.com/en/subtopics/Physical-Quantities-310909.html
V.m-2
Volt per Square Meter
Volt per Square Metre
1000000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA297
SI derived unit volt divided by the 0.000001-fold of the SI base unit second
V.us-1
H24
Volt Per Microsecond
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAA302
SI derived unit volt divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
V.mm-1
D51
Volt Per Millimeter
Volt Per Millimetre
'Volt per Second' is a unit of magnetic flux equaling one weber. This is the flux passing through a conducting loop and reduced to zero at a uniform rate in one second inducing an electric potential of one volt in the loop.
1.0
\(V / sec\)
0112/2///62720#UAA304
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1512
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Webers
V.s-1
H46
Volt per second
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA303
product of the SI derived unit volt and the SI base unit second divided by the SI base unit metre
V.s.m-1
H45
Volt Second Per Meter
Volt Second Per Metre
\(v^2/k^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB172
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=31897
V2.K-2
D45
Square Volt per Square Kelvin
A unit of electrical potential equal to one hundred millionth of a volt (\(10^{-8}\,volts\)), used in the centimeter-gram-second (CGS) system of units. One abV is the potential difference that exists between two points when the work done to transfer one abcoulomb of charge between them equals: \(1\,erg\cdot\,1\,abV\,=\,10\,nV\).
0.00000001
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abvolt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abvolt?oldid=477198646
http://www.lexic.us/definition-of/abvolt
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-27
abV
10.nV
Abvolt
In the electromagnetic centimeter-gram-second system of units, 'abvolt per centimeter' is the unit of electric field strength.
0.000001
http://www.endmemo.com/convert/electric%20field%20strength.php
abV/cm
10.nV.cm-1
Abvolt per centimeter
Abvolt per centimetre
The magnetic flux whose expenditure in 1 second produces 1 abvolt per turn of a linked circuit. Technically defined in a three-dimensional system, it corresponds in the four-dimensional electromagnetic sector of the SI system to 10 nWb, and is an impractically small unit. In use for some years, the name was agreed by the International Electrotechnical Committee in 1930, along with a corresponding practical unit, the pramaxwell (or pro-maxwell) = \(10^{8}\) maxwell.
0.00000001
\(abv-sec\)
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-820
10.nV.s
Abvolt Second
"statvolt" is a unit of voltage and electrical potential used in the cgs system of units. The conversion to the SI system is \(1 statvolt = 299.792458 volts\). The conversion factor 299.792458 is simply the numerical value of the speed of light in m/s divided by 106. The statvolt is also defined in the cgs system as \(1 erg / esu\). It is a useful unit for electromagnetism because one statvolt per centimetre is equal in magnitude to one gauss. Thus, for example, an electric field of one statvolt/cm has the same energy density as a magnetic field of one gauss. Likewise, a plane wave propagating in a vacuum has perpendicular electric and magnetic fields such that for every gauss of magnetic field intensity there is one statvolt/cm of electric field intensity. The abvolt is another option for a unit of voltage in the cgs system.
299.792458
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Statvolt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statvolt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statvolt?oldid=491769750
statV
Statvolt
\(statvolt-centimeter\)
V_Stat-CentiM
One statvolt per centimetre is equal in magnitude to one gauss. For example, an electric field of one statvolt/cm has the same energy density as a magnetic field of one gauss. Likewise, a plane wave propagating in a vacuum has perpendicular electric and magnetic fields such that for every gauss of magnetic field intensity there is one statvolt/cm of electric field intensity.
The abvolt is another option for a unit of voltage in the cgs system.
29979.2458
\(statv-per-cm\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statvolt
Statvolt per Centimeter
Statvolt per Centimetre
Vanuatu
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Vanuatu_vatu
\(VUV\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanuatu_vatu?oldid=494667103
Vatu
Venezuela
2
\(VEB\)
Venezuelan bolvar
Vietnam
0
\(VND\)
Vietnamese ??ng
The SI unit of power. Power is the rate at which work is done, or (equivalently) the rate at which energy is expended. One watt is equal to a power rate of one joule of work per second of time. This unit is used both in mechanics and in electricity, so it links the mechanical and electrical units to one another. In mechanical terms, one watt equals about 0.001 341 02 horsepower (hp) or 0.737 562 foot-pound per second (lbf/s). In electrical terms, one watt is the power produced by a current of one ampere flowing through an electric potential of one volt. The name of the unit honors James Watt (1736-1819), the British engineer whose improvements to the steam engine are often credited with igniting the Industrial Revolution.
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Watt
0112/2///62720#UAA306
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watt?oldid=494906356
\(\text{W}\ \equiv\ \text{watt}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{J}}{\text{s}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{joule}}{\text{second}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{N.m}}{\text{s}}\ \equiv\ \frac{\text{newton.metre}}{\text{second}}\ \equiv\ \text{V.A}\ \equiv\ \text{volt.amp}\ \equiv\ \Omega\text{.A}^{2}\ \equiv\ \text{ohm.amp}^{2}\)
W
W
Watt
The watt hour is a unit of energy, equal to 3,600 joule.
3600.0
W-hr
W.h
Watthour
The watt hour per cubic meter is a unit of energy density, equal to 3,600 joule per cubic meter.
3600.0
W-hr/m3
W.h.m-3
Watthour per Cubic meter
Watthour per Cubic metre
The power per unit area of radiation of a given wavenumber illuminating a target at a given incident angle.
1.0
W.m-2.m.sr-1
Watts per square metre per inverse metre per steradian
1.0
W.m2
W-M2
W.m2.sr-1
W-M2-PER-SR
Watt Per Square Centimeter is a unit of heat flux or thermal flux, the rate of heat energy transfer through a given surface.
10000.0
\(W/ft^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB224
W.cm-2
Watt per Square Centimeter
Watt per Square Centimetre
Watt Per Square Foot is a unit of heat flux or thermal flux, the rate of heat energy transfer through a given surface.
10.7639104
\(W/ft^{2}\)
W.[sft_i]-1
Watt per Square Foot
Watt Per Square Inch is a unit of heat flux or thermal flux, the rate of heat energy transfer through a given surface.
1550.0031
\(W/in^{2}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB225
W.[sin_i]-1
Watt per Square Inch
Watt Per Kelvin (\(W/K\)) is a unit in the category of Thermal conductivity.
1.0
\(w-per-K\)
0112/2///62720#UAA307
W.K-1
D52
Watt per Kelvin
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA316
SI derived unit watt divided by the SI base unit kilogram
W.kg-1
W/kg
WA
Watt Per Kilogram
Unavailable
1.0
W.m-1
Watts per metre
1.0
\(W-per-MK\)
0112/2///62720#UAA309
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conductivity
\(W \cdot m^{-1} \cdot K^{-1}\)
W.m-1.K-1
D53
Watt per Meter Kelvin
Watt per Metre Kelvin
"Watt per Square Meter} is a unit of irradiance defined as the power received per area. This is a unit in the category of Energy flux. It is also known as watts per square meter, watt per square metre, watts per square metre, watt/square meter, watt/square metre. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Watt Per Square Meter (\(W/m^2\)) has a dimension of \(MT^{-3"\) where M is mass, and T is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(W/m^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAA310
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--energy_flux--watt_per_square_meter.cfm
W.m-2
W/m2
D54
Watt per Square Meter
Watt per Square Metre
\(\textbf{Watt Per Square Meter Per Kelvin }(\(W m^{-2} K^{-1}\)) is a unit in the category of Thermal heat transfer coefficient. It is also known as watt/square meter-kelvin. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Watt Per Square Meter Per Kelvin (\(W m^{-2} K^{-1}\)) has a dimension of \(MT^{-1}Q^{-1}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(T\) is time, and \(Q\) is temperature. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(W/(m^{2}-K)\)
0112/2///62720#UAA311
W.m-2.K-1
D55
Watt per Square Meter Kelvin
Watt per Square Metre Kelvin
Watt Per Square Meter Per Quartic Kelvin (\(W/m2\cdotK4)\) is a unit in the category of light.
1.0
\(W/(m^2.K^4)\)
W.m-2.K-4
Watt per Square Meter Quartic Kelvin
Watt per Square Metre Quartic Kelvin
Unavailable
1.0
W.m-2.m-1
Watts per square metre per metre
Unavailable
1.0
W.m-2.m-1.sr-1
Watts per square metre per metre per steradian
Unavailable
1000000000.0
W.m-2.nm-1
Watts per square metre per nanometre
Unavailable
1000000000.0
W.m-2.nm-1.sr-1
Watts per square metre per nanometre per steradian
Watt Per Square Meter Per Pascal (\(W/m^2-pa\)) is a unit of Evaporative Heat Transfer.
1.0
\(W/(m^2.pa)\)
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=43012
W.m-2.Pa-1
Watt per Square Meter Pascal
Watt per Square Metre Pascal
\(\textbf{Watt per steradian per square metre}\) is the SI unit of radiance (\(W·sr^{-1}·m^{-2}\)), while that of spectral radiance in frequency is the watt per steradian per square metre per hertz (\(W·sr^{-1}·m^{-2}·Hz^{-1}\)) and that of spectral radiance in wavelength is the watt per steradian per square metre, per metre (\(W·sr^{-1}·m^{-3}\)), commonly the watt per steradian per square metre per nanometre (\(W·sr^{-1}·m^{-2}·nm^{-1}\)). It has a dimension of \(ML^{-4}T^{-3}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(W/(m^2.sr)\)
http://asd-www.larc.nasa.gov/Instrument/ceres_units.html
http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--radiance--watt_per_square_meter_per_steradian.cfm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiance
W.m-2.sr-1
Watt per Square Meter Steradian
Watt per Square Metre Steradian
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA312
SI derived unit watt divided by the power of the SI base unit metre with the exponent 3
W.m-3
H47
Watt Per Cubic Meter
Watt Per Cubic Metre
\(\textbf{Watt Per Steradian (W/sr)}\) is the unit in the category of Radiant intensity. It is also known as watts per steradian. This unit is commonly used in the SI unit system. Watt Per Steradian (W/sr) has a dimension of \(M\cdot L^{-2}\cdot T^{-3}\) where \(M\) is mass, \(L\) is length, and \(T\) is time. This unit is the standard SI unit in this category.
1.0
\(W sr^{-1}\)
0112/2///62720#UAA314
W.sr-1
D57
Watt per Steradian
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA313
product of the SI derived unit watt and SI base unit second
W.s
J55
Watt Second
Unavailable
1.0
W.s.m-2
Watt seconds per square metre
The SI unit of magnetic flux. "Flux" is the rate (per unit of time) at which something crosses a surface perpendicular to the flow. The weber is a large unit, equal to \(10^{8}\) maxwells, and practical fluxes are usually fractions of one weber. The weber is the magnetic flux which, linking a circuit of one turn, would produce in it an electromotive force of 1 volt if it were reduced to zero at a uniform rate in 1 second. In SI base units, the dimensions of the weber are \((kg \cdot m^2)/(s^2 \cdot A)\). The weber is commonly expressed in terms of other derived units as the Tesla-square meter (\(T \cdot m^2\)), volt-seconds (\(V \cdot s\)), or joules per ampere (\(J/A\)).
1.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Weber
0112/2///62720#UAA317
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weber?oldid=491210387
V.s
Wb
Wb
WEB
Weber
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAB333
http://www.simetric.co.uk/siderived.htm
WbM
Wb.m
Weber Meter
Weber Metre
1.0
0112/2///62720#UAA318
SI derived unit weber divided by the SI base unit metre
Wb.m-1
D59
Weber Per Meter
Weber Per Metre
1000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB074
derived SI unit weber divided by the 0.001-fold of the SI base unit metre
Wb.mm-1
D60
Weber Per Millimeter
Weber Per Millimetre
Switzerland
2
\(CHE\)
WIR Euro (complementary currency)
Switzerland
2
\(CHW\)
WIR Franc (complementary currency)
Mean solar week
604800.0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Week
0112/2///62720#UAB024
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Week?oldid=493867029
wk
wk
WEE
Week
Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon
0
CFA Franc BEAC
Currency of Benin, Burkina Faso, CÔte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo
0
CFA Franc BCEAO
French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and Futuna
0
CFP franc
A yard is a unit of length in several different systems including United States customary units, Imperial units and the former English units. It is equal to 3 feet or 36 inches. Under an agreement in 1959 between Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States, the yard (known as the "international yard" in the United States) was legally defined to be exactly 0.9144 metres.
0.9144
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Yard
0112/2///62720#UAB030
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yard?oldid=492334628
yd
[yd_i]
YRD
Yard
1.6459200164592
0112/2///62720#UAB031
unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units divided by the unit for temperature degree Fahrenheit
[yd_i].[degF]-1
L98
Yard Per Degree Fahrenheit
The square yard is an imperial/US customary unit of area, formerly used in most of the English-speaking world but now generally replaced by the square metre outside of the U.S. , Canada and the U.K. It is defined as the area of a square with sides of one yard in length. (Gaj in Hindi).
0.83612736
\(yd^2\)
0112/2///62720#UAB034
[syd_i]
[yd_i]2
YDK
Square Yard
A cubic yard is an Imperial / U.S. customary unit of volume, used in the United States, Canada, and the UK. It is defined as the volume of a cube with sides of 1 yard in length.
0.764554857984
\(yd^{3}\)
0112/2///62720#UAB035
[cyd_i]
[yd_i]3
YDQ
Cubic Yard
0.00000884901456
0112/2///62720#UAB037
power of the unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for time day
[cyd_i].d-1
M12
Cubic Yard Per Day
1.376198881991088
0112/2///62720#UAB036
power of the unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for temperature degree Fahrenheit
[cyd_i].[degF]-1
M11
Cubic Yard Per Degree Fahrenheit
0.00021237634944
0112/2///62720#UAB038
power of the unit yard according to the Anglo-American and the Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the unit for the time hour
[cyd_i].h-1
M13
Cubic Yard Per Hour
"Cubic Yard per Minute" is an Imperial unit for 'Volume Per Unit Time' expressed as \(yd^{3}/min\).
0.0127425809664
\(yd^{3}/min\)
0112/2///62720#UAB040
[cyd_i].min-1
[cyd_i]/min
[yd_i]3.min-1
[yd_i]3/min
M15
Cubic Yard per Minute
0.764554857984
0112/2///62720#UAB041
power of the unit and the Anglo-American and Imperial system of units with the exponent 3 divided by the SI base unit second
[cyd_i].s-1
M16
Cubic Yard Per Second
A year is any of the various periods equated with one passage of Earth about the Sun, and hence of roughly 365 days. The familiar calendar has a mixture of 365- and 366-day years, reflecting the fact that the time for one complete passage takes about 365¼ days; the precise value for this figure depends on the manner of defining the year.
31557600.0
0112/2///62720#UAB026
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198605225.001.0001/acref-9780198605225-e-1533?rskey=b94Fd6
a
a
ANN
Year
31536000.0
0112/2///62720#UAB025
31,536,000-fold of the SI base unit second according a common year with 365 days
L95
Common Year
A sidereal year is the time taken for Sun to return to the same position with respect to the stars of the celestial sphere.
31558149.7632
0112/2///62720#UAB028
yr
L96
Sidereal Year
<p>A tropical year (also known as a solar year), for general purposes, is the length of time that the Sun takes to return to the same position in the cycle of seasons, as seen from Earth; for example, the time from vernal equinox to vernal equinox, or from summer solstice to summer solstice. Because of the precession of the equinoxes, the seasonal cycle does not remain exactly synchronised with the position of the Earth in its orbit around the Sun. As a consequence, the tropical year is about 20 minutes shorter than the time it takes Earth to complete one full orbit around the Sun as measured with respect to the fixed stars. Since antiquity, astronomers have progressively refined the definition of the tropical year, and currently define it as the time required for the mean Sun's tropical longitude (longitudinal position along the ecliptic relative to its position at the vernal equinox) to increase by 360 degrees (that is, to complete one full seasonal circuit).</p>
31556925.216
0112/2///62720#UAB029
a_{t}
a_t
D42
Tropical Year
solar year
Yemen
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Yemeni_rial
\(YER\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yemeni_rial?oldid=494507603
Yemeni Rial
A YoctoCoulomb is \(10^{-24} C\).
0.000000000000000000000001
yC
yC
YoctoCoulomb
A YottaCoulomb is \(10^{24} C\).
1000000000000000000000000.0
YC
YC
YottaCoulomb
Mainland China
1
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Renminbi
\(CNY\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renminbi?oldid=494799454
Yuan Renminbi
In chemistry and physics, the atomic number (also known as the proton number) is the number of protons found in the nucleus of an atom and therefore identical to the charge number of the nucleus. It is conventionally represented by the symbol Z. The atomic number uniquely identifies a chemical element. In an atom of neutral charge, the atomic number is also equal to the number of electrons.
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Atomic_number
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_number?oldid=490723437
Z
atomic-number
Zambia
0
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Zambian_kwacha
\(ZMK\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zambian_kwacha?oldid=490328608
Zambian Kwacha
A ZeptoCoulomb is \(10^{-21} C\).
0.000000000000000000001
zC
zC
ZeptoCoulomb
A ZettaCoulomb is \(10^{21} C\).
1000000000000000000000.0
ZC
ZC
ZettaCoulomb
Zimbabwe
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Zimbabwean_dollar
\(ZWD\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zimbabwean_dollar?oldid=491532675
Zimbabwe Dollar
Poland
2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Polish_z%C5%82oty
\(PLN\)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_złoty?oldid=492697733
Zloty
0.0
0112/2///62720#UAB403
unit of failure rate
s-1{failures}
FIT
Failures In Time
QUDT UNITS Vocab Catalog Entry
Jack Hodges
Simon J D Cox
Steve Ray
2019-07-30
Steve Ray
2021-08-05T11:21:51.642-07:00
This product includes all or a portion of the UCUM table, UCUM codes, and UCUM definitions or is derived from it, subject to a license from Regenstrief Institute, Inc. and The UCUM Organization. Your use of the UCUM table, UCUM codes, UCUM definitions also is subject to this license, a copy of which is available at http://unitsofmeasure.org. The current complete UCUM table, UCUM Specification are available for download at http://unitsofmeasure.org. The UCUM table and UCUM codes are copyright © 1995-2009, Regenstrief Institute, Inc. and the Unified Codes for Units of Measures (UCUM) Organization. All rights reserved.
THE UCUM TABLE (IN ALL FORMATS), UCUM DEFINITIONS, AND SPECIFICATION ARE PROVIDED 'AS IS.' ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
The QUDT Ontologies are issued under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Attribution should be made to QUDT.org
Units-All
ALL UNITS Version 2.1.12 Graph Metadata
Standard units of measure for all units.
qudt
All Units Ontology Version 2.1.12
To provide a vocabulary of all units.
http://www.qudt.org/doc/2021/08/DOC_VOCAB-UNITS-ALL-v2.1.html
http://www.linkedmodel.org/lib/lm/images/logos/qudt_logo-300x110.png
http://qudt.org/vocab/unit/
unit
QUDT.org
http://www.qudt.org/doc/2021/07/DOC_VOCAB-UNITS-ALL-v2.1.html
2.1
http://qudt.org/2.1/vocab/unit
All Units Ontology Version 2.1.12