One common use of this unit is rotational inertia, which has units of mass x distance squared, i.e. in the metric system, kilogram meters squared. Rotational inertia is analogous to mass, but is relevant to rotation rather than straight line motion.
There are probably a number of other uses for this unit, but this is one of the most common.
One joule is equivalent to 1 kilogram meter squared per second squared (kg m2/s2).
It is not.Acceleration is measured in metres per second squared, while area is measured in metres squared.It is not.Acceleration is measured in metres per second squared, while area is measured in metres squared.It is not.Acceleration is measured in metres per second squared, while area is measured in metres squared.It is not.Acceleration is measured in metres per second squared, while area is measured in metres squared.
The relationship between the units of 1 joule, 1 kilogram, 1 meter squared, and 1 second squared is that they are all related to energy and are part of the SI (International System of Units) system of measurement. 1 joule is the unit of energy, 1 kilogram is the unit of mass, 1 meter squared is the unit of area, and 1 second squared is the unit of time squared. These units are interconnected in equations that involve energy, mass, distance, and time.
There's an extra "per second" in the question. One "kilogram-meter per second squared" is one "newton".
1 gram = 0.001 kg 14 grams = 0.014 kg 0.014 kg/meter sq = 14 grams/meter sq
Newton is a unit of measurement for force. It is used to quantify the amount of force required to accelerate a mass of one kilogram at a rate of one meter per second squared.
Inertia can be measured by an object's mass. That would make the SI unit the kilogram.
In SI system, it is measured in Newton(N).
He didn't. The newton unit is defined as a kilogram-meter per second squared, meaning it does not predate the invention of the kilogram, meter, and (scientifically defined) second. The international prototype kilogram was standardized in 1889, so the newton does not predate this year, at least.
One newton.
The unit of force in the MKS (meter-kilogram-second) system is the Newton (N), which is defined as the force required to accelerate a 1 kilogram mass by 1 meter per second squared.
The unit of force in the International System of Units is the newton, defined as one kilogram meter per second squared (kg m/s2).