Femtometer per Square Second to Acceleration of Gravity Conversion

Convert between Femtometer per Square Second and Acceleration of Gravity quickly and accurately.

fm/s²
g

How to Convert Femtometer per Square Second to Acceleration of Gravity

Conversion Formula

1 fm/s² = 1E-16 g
1 g = 1E+16 fm/s²

Example

Convert 15 fm/s² to g:

15 fm/s² = 15 × 1E-16 g = 2E-15 g

Unit Information

Learn about the acceleration units you're converting between

Femtometer per Square Second

fm/s²

Definition

The femtometer per square second (fm/s²) is a unit of acceleration, representing the rate of change of velocity per unit time in femtometers. It is equal to one-quadrillionth of a meter per square second.

History/Origin

Derived from the femtometer, a metric unit of length equal to one-quadrillionth of a meter, and the second. It is used for measuring extremely small accelerations in nuclear and particle physics applications.

Current Use

Used in nuclear physics, particle physics, and advanced scientific research where femtometer-scale accelerations need to be measured with extreme precision.

Multiplier

1E-15

Offset

0

Acceleration of Gravity

g

Definition

The acceleration of gravity (g) is a unit of acceleration equal to the standard gravitational acceleration on Earth's surface. It is approximately 9.80665 meters per square second.

History/Origin

The acceleration of gravity was standardized in the 20th century as 9.80665 m/s² for the standard gravitational acceleration on Earth's surface. It is widely used in physics and engineering.

Current Use

Widely used in physics, engineering, and mechanics for measuring accelerations relative to Earth's gravity, particularly in aerospace, automotive, and mechanical applications.

Multiplier

9.807

Offset

0

Femtometer per Square Second to Acceleration of Gravity Conversion Table

Femtometer per Square Second [fm/s²] Acceleration of Gravity [g]
1 fm/s² 1E-16 g
10 fm/s² 1E-15 g
25 fm/s² 3E-15 g
50 fm/s² 5E-15 g
100 fm/s² 1E-14 g
0 fm/s² 0E+0 g
-10 fm/s² -1E-15 g
-40 fm/s² -4E-15 g