No, because a newton is a measurement of force. You can only convert units that measure the same object. For example you can convert meters to feet because they are both measurements of distance.
The standard unit of force is the newton (N) in the International System of Units (SI). In the Imperial system, force is measured in pounds (lb) or pound-force (lbf).
the atmosphere if by "surface gravity", you mean the potential energy forced upon us by gravitational pull, then it's joules. If you mean the actual force of the gravity, it's newtons. (also known as our weight.)
No, speeds are not measured in units called newtons. Speed is a measure of how fast an object is moving and is typically measured in units like meters per second (m/s) or kilometers per hour (km/h). Newtons refer to a unit of force.
"Gravitation" doesn't really have units. Weight, which is the force experienced by an object due to gravity, is a force, so it's expressed in force units: newtons. A newton is a kilogram - meter per second squared expressed in SI base units.
Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters, kilometers, newtons, or pounds-force for displacement or force; meters per second or kilometers per hour for velocity; and newtons or pounds-force for acceleration.
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, Newtons (N) for force, and Newtons per coulomb (N/C) for electric field.
The units for gravitational field strength are Newtons per kilogram (N/kg) or meters per second squared (m/sĀ²).
You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.
Pressure = force (newtons) / area (sq. cms)units are newtons per sq. cmNote: SI units for pressure are newtons / sq. metre (pascals)
Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, so they are expressed in units such as meters per second (velocity) or newtons (force). Scalar quantities only have magnitude and are represented by units such as meters (distance) or kilograms (mass).
Units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, newtons (N) for force, and teslas (T) for magnetic field strength can be used to describe vector quantities.
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m), newtons (N), and kilograms (kg) for displacement, force, and mass, respectively. Additionally, vector quantities like velocity can be measured in meters per second (m/s) and acceleration in meters per second squared (m/s^2).
Assuming you want the international units: time: second velocity: meters / second distance: meters acceleration: meters / second2
Sound intensity is measured in watts per square meters, but our eardrums are only moved by the sound pressure measured in newtons per square meters or pascals.
No. Pressure is force units divided by area units. Force units divided by temperature units would be... well, let's see, in the SI system forces are newtons, which are kilogram-meters per second per second, so force per unit temperature would be kilogram-meters per second per second per Kelvin. Hmm. Sorry, I don't think that directly rates to any simple concept. Entropy per meter? Thermal conductivity per hertz? The units work out right, but these are basically nonsense.