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200m/s^2. Change it to k/hr^2

2006-11-19 09:30:20 · 5 answers · asked by Ha!! 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

5 answers

Question is: why on earth would you want to make that calculation? m/s^2 is the standard form for acceleration.

2006-11-19 09:40:58 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You want the units m and s^2 to cancel out (by one being in the numerator and the other in the denominator) so that you're left with km on top and hr^2 on the bottom.
(200m/s^2) x (1km / 1000m) x ((60s)^2 / 1hr^2)

2006-11-19 17:43:13 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

200 m/s² × (3600 s/hr)² × (.001 km/m) = 2,592,000 km/hr²
(Write the units as fractions in working out the equation, and see that the appropriate units cancel out, to get the units right and as a check of the validity of the equation.)

2006-11-19 17:40:28 · answer #3 · answered by engineer01 5 · 1 1

1000 meters in a kilometer

.2 km/s^2

1/s^2 = 3600^2 hr^2

.2km*3600^2/hr^2 = 2,592,000 km/hr^2

2006-11-19 17:45:55 · answer #4 · answered by ve1luv 2 · 0 0

im guessing thats supposed to be km ... in which case u divide by 1000 so its .2km/s^2

2006-11-19 17:37:33 · answer #5 · answered by R 2 the T 2 · 0 0

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