c in E=mc squared meaqns the speed of light
In the classic equation E = mc^2, c stands for the speed of light.
E²=(mc²)²+(pc)² is Einstein's full equation for quantifying a particle's energy based on its mass and momentum, but this is more often simplified to the famous equation "E=mc²" because it describes standing particles, which are much easier to work with, and is much simpler
Equal to MC.
'emc2' means nothing!!! If you mean E = mc^(2) This means Energy(E) Equal(=) mass(m) Multiplied to The speed of light squared. c^(2) It is from nuclear physics. Note its similarity to K.E. = mv^(2) The energy of 'slow' moving objects.
mc= 16
C = speed of light
Energy=Mass xC2 What does the C stand for?
He created the equation E=MC squared
Relativity.
For his famous equation of: E = MC squared
mass * (Speed of light)^2
2 mc squared
PET scans
I'm pretty sure it was Einstein....
e=mc squared the energy mass equivalence formula.
The letters in Einstein's equation, E=mc^2, stand for energy (E), mass (m), and the speed of light (c) squared. This equation shows the equivalence of mass and energy, highlighting that energy can be converted into mass and vice versa.
E = energy energy = mass X velocity of light squared The common form of the equation in conventional units is E = mc^2, but in relativistic units (where the speed of light c is 1) the equation reduces to just E = m which is much easier to calculate. The factor c^2 is just a units conversion constant.