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Relation between S.I and C.G.S units with working?

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Answered by xXitzSweetMelodyXx
9

Explanation:

Question⤵️

Relation between S.I and C.G.S units with working?

Answer⤵️

The CGS unit of force is the dyne, which is 1 gram-centimeter/second^2.

The SI unit of force is the newton, which is 1 kg-meter/sec^2.

1 newton = 100,000 dyne or 10^5 dyn or 10E5 dyn.

For a gutsy comparison, 1 newton is the force of weight of about 1/4 pound on earth.

A kilogram of mass, on the other hand, on the earth weighs about 2.2 pounds.

A piece of A4 paper (29.7 cm x 21.0 cm) is 623.7 cm^2 and has a mass of 4.5 grams, so its weight on earth is 4.5 g x 981 cm/sec^2, or 4,414.5 dynes, so one dyne would be the weight of a piece of A4 paper that is 623.7 cm^2/4,414.5 dyn = 0.1413 cm^2, or a square 3.76 mm on each side.

That may give you a mental idea of how much a newton and a dyne are

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xXitzSweetMelodyXx

Answered by Anonymous
175

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Therefore, 1 joule = 107 erg. So S.I unit of work = 107 times the C.G.S unit of the work. So this is the required relation between the S.I and the C.G.S unit of the work.

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