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Metre per second squared

SI derived unit of acceleration


SI derived unit of acceleration

FieldValue
namemetre per second squared
standardSI
quantityacceleration
symbolm/s2

The metre per second squared or metre 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 of time, the second. Its symbol is written in several forms as m/s2, m·s−2 or m s−2, , or less commonly, as (m/s)/s.

As acceleration, the unit is interpreted physically as change in velocity or speed per time interval, i.e. metre per second per second and is treated as a vector quantity.

Example

When an object experiences a constant acceleration of one metre per second squared (1 m/s2) from a state of rest, it achieves the speed of 5 m/s after 5 seconds and 10 m/s after 10 seconds. The average acceleration a can be calculated by dividing the speed v (m/s) by the time t (s), so the average acceleration in the first example would be calculated: : a = \frac{\Delta v}{\Delta t} = \frac{5\text{ m/s}}{5\text{ s}} = 1\text{ (m/s)/s} = 1\text{ m/s}^2.

Unicode character

The "metre per second squared" symbol is encoded by Unicode at code point . This is for compatibility with East Asian encodings and not intended to be used in new documents.

Conversions

References

References

  1. Note that the SI standard does not permit omission of the parentheses in the latter: [http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP330/sp330.pdf NIST Special Publication 330, 2008 Edition: The International System of Units (SI)] {{webarchive. link. (2016-06-03 p. 130 "A solidus must not be used more than once in a given expression without brackets to remove ambiguities.")
  2. Kirk, Tim: ''Physics for the IB Diploma; Standard and Higher Level'', Page 61, Oxford University Press, 2003.
  3. Unicode Consortium. (2019). "The Unicode Standard 12.0 – CJK Compatibility Range: 3300–33FF".
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