1 daNm = 10 Nm
1000 nanometres = 1 micrometre so 50 nm = 50/1000 mcm = 0.05 micrometres. Simple!
A nm (nanometer) = 10-9 m 1 cm = 10-2 m Thus 1 nm = 10-7 cm or 1 cm = 107 nm So 183 cm = 1.83 109 nm
1 angstrom = 0.1 nanometers
1 nautical mile = 1.85318054 kilometre 170 nm = 315 .041 km (rounded)
1 knot is defined as a speed of 1 nm/h So obviously it takes one hour to travel 30 nm ... which leaves another 5 nm to be covered. One hour has 60 minutes, so in one minute, you are travelling 30 nm / 60 minutes , which equals 0.5 nm With this knowledge, you can easily deduct that, to travel the remaining 5 nm, you'll need ten minutes. If you sum it up, you get 1 hour = 60 minutes plus 10 minutes = 70 minutes. That's how long it takes to travel 35 nm at 30 knots .... If you like an easier answer, its 35/30*60.
1 daNm (dekanoewton meter) is equal to 0.1 newton meters. It represents a small unit of torque, which is a measure of the rotational force acting on an object.
NM equals 2x + 1, as stated in the question!
1 nm is 1 Newton.meter, which is 1 Joule. This equals 0.7376 ft.lbf
1 nm = 0.001 µm1 µm = 1000 nmyou may try the online converter linked below next time
since 1 µm is 10-6 m, and 1 nm is 10-9 m, 1 µm equals 103 (1000) nm
1 meter = 1 billion nanometers (1,000,000,000 nm)
To find out how many 1 nm cubes fit in a 1 cm³ cube, we first convert the dimensions. One centimeter is equal to 10,000,000 nanometers (10^7 nm). The volume of the 1 cm³ cube is (10^7 nm)³, which equals 10^21 nm³. Since the volume of one 1 nm cube is 1 nm³, a total of 10^21 cubes of 1 nm can fit in a 1 cm³ cube.
1 Nm. = 1.852 km. 127 km. = 68.57451 Nm.
1 nm is 1 Newton.meter, which is 1 Joule. This equals 0.7376 ft.lbf
There are 10,000 picometers (pm) in 1 nanometer (nm).
To convert 0.000000450 meters (m) to nanometers (nm), you multiply by 1 billion (10^9), since 1 meter equals 1 billion nanometers. So, 0.000000450 m × 10^9 nm/m = 450 nm. Therefore, 0.000000450 m is equal to 450 nm.
1000 nanometres = 1 micrometre so 50 nm = 50/1000 mcm = 0.05 micrometres. Simple!