You need more information to specify exactly what you are trying to do here, but I can give you one common example that will hopefully get you on the right track.
If you take the example of a cylinder spinning about it's axis, then you can convert between its rotational speed in revolutions per minute (RPM) and the tangential surface velocity (m/s) if you know the diameter of the cylinder. Essentially, you divide the time of one rotation into the circumference of the cylinder.
Legend:
V = tangential surface velocity
C = circumference of cylinder
D = diameter of cylinder
RPM = revolutions per minute
Pi = 3.14
Equations:
V = C * RPM = Pi * D * RPM
or
RPM = V / (Pi * D)
Example:
A cylinder with a diameter of 1 meter is rotating at 60 rpm. Its tangential surface velocity is:
V = (3.14) * (1 m) * (60 rpm) = 188.4 m/min = 3.14 m/s.
Well, honey, you can't convert meters per second to RPMs directly because they're measuring different things - one's a speed, the other's a rotation. You'd need to know the radius of the rotating object to calculate RPMs from meters per second. So, grab that radius, do some math, and voilà, you've got your RPMs.
To convert meters per second to RPM (revolutions per minute), you need to know the circumference of the rotating object. First, calculate the circumference by multiplying the diameter of the object by pi (π). Then, divide the speed in meters per second by the circumference to get the number of revolutions per second. Finally, multiply this value by 60 to convert revolutions per second to RPM.
Oh, dude, converting meters per second to RPM's is like trying to turn a potato into a pineapple. You gotta know the circumference of the circle first, then divide that by the speed in meters per second to get the number of revolutions per minute. It's not rocket science... well, actually, it kind of is, but who's counting?
Meters per second x 3.28 = feet per second.
If your flow is in Volume/Time, e.g. m3/s, and it's given per area, e.g. m2, you come up with the flow speed. An appopiate unit would be m/s Example: If your flow is 6 cubic meters per second, and this is given for 2 square meters, the flow has a speed of 3 meters per second. Now the conversion to SI: 1 gpm = 6.30902e-5 m3/s 1 ft2 = 0.092903 m2 So 1 gpm per ft2 would give a flow speed of 6.79098e-4 m/s (0.68 millimeter per second) If you don't have a volumetric flow, use the density of the material to convert it.
cm per second x 1.97 (or 1.96850394) = feet per minute* 68.2 x 1.97 = 134.354 feet per second
Inch pounds is a measure of energy. One horse power is 550 ft-pounds per second, which is also equal to 6600 inch-pounds per second.
radio waves travels at the speed of light i,e 299,792,458 meters
You cannot convert cubic meters per second to meters per second. You cannot convert volume to length.
Multiply by time
Multiply by seconds.
Multiply cubic meters per second by 35.31 to convert to cubic feet per second.
Multiply feet per second by 0.3048 to get meters per second.
Use this conversion: meters per second x 3,600 = meters per hour
To convert feet per second to meters per hour, you first convert feet to meters by multiplying by 0.3048 and then convert seconds to hours by dividing by 3600. Therefore, 217.65 feet per second is approximately 148.53 meters per hour.
2000 (meters per second) = 4,473.87258 mph
Divide the distance by the time. The result will be in meters per second. If you want to convert to kilometers per hour, multiply the meters per second by 3.6.Divide the distance by the time. The result will be in meters per second. If you want to convert to kilometers per hour, multiply the meters per second by 3.6.Divide the distance by the time. The result will be in meters per second. If you want to convert to kilometers per hour, multiply the meters per second by 3.6.Divide the distance by the time. The result will be in meters per second. If you want to convert to kilometers per hour, multiply the meters per second by 3.6.
Convert this to a common unit. For example, to convert meters per second to km/hour, multiply by 3.6.Convert this to a common unit. For example, to convert meters per second to km/hour, multiply by 3.6.Convert this to a common unit. For example, to convert meters per second to km/hour, multiply by 3.6.Convert this to a common unit. For example, to convert meters per second to km/hour, multiply by 3.6.
To convert 66 kilograms per hour to meters per second, we need to first convert kilograms to meters using the acceleration due to gravity, which is 9.81 m/s^2. Once we find the value in meters per hour, we can then convert it to meters per second by dividing by 3600 since there are 3600 seconds in an hour.
Multiply feet per second by 18.288 to get meters per minute.