the velocity term of m/s is meters per second
hopefully this is what you were asking
"ms" may be short for meters per second.It is possible that somebody was talking about velocity; in this case, "north" is the direction of the movement.
the velocity term of m/s is meters per second hopefully this is what you were asking
The unit of velocity in the SI unit system is meters per second (m/s).
You have: F = ( m ) ( a ) = ( 1.0 kg ) (1.0 m/s^2 ) = 1.0 Newton = 1.0 N <----------------------
10kg
meters per second
ms-2 SI Unit of acceleration feet-2 etcD. Meters per second squared
No; the metre is a unit of length. The appropriate unit for speed would be metres per second, ms-1.
'ms-2' is the SI derived unit of acceleration. It means that a speed X is changing by 1ms-1 for every second of its acceleration.
Impulse is measured in kgms-1 (mass times change in velocity).
Meter per secondThere is no standard SI unit for velocity actually. It is a derived unit. Velocity is distance traveled per time together with the direction of motion. The SI unit of distance is the meter (m) and the SI unit of time is the second (s).So the units of velocity in SI units is meters/second (m/s), or ms-1See the Related Questions link to the left "What are all the SI units" for more information about SI units.CommentDerived units are SI units.
There are several "metric systems". However, the only one used internationally nowadays is the SI; in this case, the base unit length is the meter.