The unit that is used in the denominator is the one to cancels the unit that appears in a numerator.
It is the units for the measurement which you are converting FROM.
The denominator must contain the unit that you wish to cancel in the numerator of the other number.
It is the unit of the measurement which you are converting FROM.
Multiply the original quantity by a conversion factor, a fraction containing the desired unit in the numerator and the original unit in the denominator so that the fraction is equal to one.
The unit that is used in the denominator is the one to cancels the unit that appears in a numerator.
It is the units for the measurement which you are converting FROM.
The denominator must contain the unit that you wish to cancel in the numerator of the other number.
These are the units which are used for the measurement that you are converting FROM.
There is no such unit. For example, the denominator for Celsius to Fahrenheit is 9, for F to C is 5.
It is the unit of the measurement which you are converting FROM.
The numerator must contain the unit INTO which you are converting.
The unit that is used in the denominator is the one to cancels the unit that appears in a numerator.
conversion factor
The conversion factor is used to made this conversion.
Assuming you are talking about stoichiometery a conversion factor is often a number with two units. For example a conversion factor could be Miles per hour (Miles/hour). If you had miles and needed to convert to hours you would multiply the miles by Hours/miles so that the miles would be canceled out (miles/miles = 1). Then your units left would be hours. Or vice versa. There are other factors like this in chemistry like grams/mol Mol/liter etc. To put it shortly the conversion factor denominator is always paired with the numerator.
A conversion factor is the same as multiplying by a factor of?