"Acceleration" means "rate of change in velocity, and the direction of the change".
So acceleration is (change in velocity) divided by (time for the change), plus the direction.
(Any unit of speed) divided by (any unit of time) is a unit of acceleration.
Some possibilities include:
-- feet per second2
-- meters per second2
-- miles per hour per second
-- furlongs per week per fortnight
-- smoots per month per day
.
.
etc.
To complete the acceleration vector, it also needs to include a direction.
[acceleration] = [any unit of length] / [any unit of time]2
[any unit of length] / [any unit of time]2 is a unit of acceleration
D. Meters per second squared
Erg.
No, it is unit of energy
Meter / second / second, usually written as meter/second2, is the unit. There is no special name for this unit. It is a unit used for acceleration.
The SI unit for acceleration is the meter per second squared (m/s 2).
The atomic mass unit is used to express the measure of the atomic mass.
the unit of acceleration is unit length per squared unit time, usually m/s2.
The unit of acceleration used in England is metres per second^2.
The unit to express power is YOUR MOMMA
the unit used to express power is time
In the SI, acceleration is expressed in meters / second2.
(any unit of speed) / (any unit of time)OR(any unit of length or distance) / (any unit of time, squared)is a perfectly appropriate unit of acceleration.If you're dealing with acceleration as a vector, then a direction also needs to go with it.
constant acceleration is a measure of a continuing increase in velocity per unit of time. another way to express it is: d²x/dt² = c where c is a constant
Hertz
Typically "ft/sec2" is used.
The same units as are used for any type of acceleration. In the SI, that would be meters/second2.
There are many units that cannot be used to express a volume.There is something missing from your question to request the only unit.
Unit conversions express an amount in a different unit.