Physics, asked by ritesh1984, 10 months ago

SI and CGS units of G.??​

Answers

Answered by shahoam21
2

Explanation:

The dimensions assigned to the gravitational constant are force times length squared divided by mass squared; this is equivalent to length cubed, divided by mass and by time squared: In SI base units, this amounts to meters cubed per kilogram per second squared: In cgs, G can be written as G ≈ 6.674×10−8 cm3⋅g−1⋅s−2.

Answered by ritikaritikasaini
2

Answer:

The value of gravitational constant (G) in S.I. units is given by 6.67 X 10-11 Nm2 kg-2 and in cgs system, it is given by 6.67 X 10-8 dyne cm2g-2. So, the ratio of G in S.I. to cgs system is 10-3.

Explanation:

mrk me as brainlist

Similar questions