The dioptre, which is equal to 1/meter.
cgs . . .dyne-centimeter/second, equivalent to erg/secondmks . . .watt, equivalent tojoule/secondnewton-meter/secondkilogram-meter2/second3
In the MKS (meter-kilogram-second) system, the unit of mass is the kilogram (kg).
Any energy - electrical or otherwise - is measured in Joule.
MKS unit of power is "Watt 'W' (1W=1J/s)" CGS unit of power is "egr(cgs unit of work)per second"
The centimetre-gram-second system (CGS) is a system of physical units. It is always the same for mechanical units, but there are several variants of electric additions. It was replaced by the MKS, or metre-kilogram-second system, which in turn was replaced by the International System of Units (SI), which has the three base units of MKS plus the ampere, mole, candela and kelvin. from Arun
The correct unit for speed in MKS system is 'm'.
cgs . . .dyne-centimeter/second, equivalent to erg/secondmks . . .watt, equivalent tojoule/secondnewton-meter/secondkilogram-meter2/second3
In the MKS (meter-kilogram-second) system, the unit of mass is the kilogram (kg).
when the unit of any physical quantity is measured in terms of meter or kilogram or second or in combination of these then it is said that unit is in MKS system.
Any energy - electrical or otherwise - is measured in Joule.
meter/second2.
MKS unit of power is "Watt 'W' (1W=1J/s)" CGS unit of power is "egr(cgs unit of work)per second"
The centimetre-gram-second system (CGS) is a system of physical units. It is always the same for mechanical units, but there are several variants of electric additions. It was replaced by the MKS, or metre-kilogram-second system, which in turn was replaced by the International System of Units (SI), which has the three base units of MKS plus the ampere, mole, candela and kelvin. from Arun
There are several MKS systems (metric systems based on meter, kilogram, second); the one most used is called SI. In this case, the unit of temperature is the Kelvin.
The unit of force in the MKS (meter-kilogram-second) system is the Newton (N), which is defined as the force required to accelerate a 1 kilogram mass by 1 meter per second squared.
Stress has the same dimensions as pressure: force per unit area. In the SI, therefore (or in other MKS systems), the units would be newtons / meter2.
The MKS (meter-kilogram-second) unit for energy is the joule (J).