It is a unit of measurement of acceleration in the old imperial system.
Meters per second squared I think thank you
1 metre per second squared = 12960 kilometres per hour squared
No, foot-pounds is not a unit of acceleration. Foot-pounds is a unit of energy or work, which is a product of force and distance. Acceleration is measured in units such as meters per second squared (m/s^2) or feet per second squared (ft/s^2).
32 feet per second squared equates to 35,112.96 meters per minute squared.
1 meter per second squared equates to 42,519,685 feet per hour squared.
The answer is B - 3 meters per second squared
To convert meters to feet, multiply by 3.281. It does not matter about the "per second squared" since that is present in both sides.
The unit of acceleration in the FPS (Foot-Pound-Second) system is feet per second squared (ft/s^2). This unit is used to measure how quickly the velocity of an object is changing over time.
There's an extra "per second" in the question. One "kilogram-meter per second squared" is one "newton".
Assuming you want the international units: time: second velocity: meters / second distance: meters acceleration: meters / second2
At one foot per second, it would take 15 seconds. The Earth's gravitational pull is 32.2 ft per second squared.
No. It equals 32 feet per second squared, or 32 ft sec-2