gc (engineering)

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Revision as of 21:55, 6 October 2024 by imported>LR.127 (Adding local short description: "Unit conversion factor in physics", overriding Wikidata description "unit conversion factor commonly applied in engineering to convert from units of mass to force or vice versa")
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Template:Short description


In engineering and physics, gc is a unit conversion factor used to convert mass to force or vice versa.[1] It is defined as

gc=maF

In unit systems where force is a derived unit, like in SI units, gc is equal to 1. In unit systems where force is a primary unit, like in imperial and US customary measurement systems, gc may or may not equal 1 depending on the units used, and value other than 1 may be required to obtain correct results.[2] For example, in the kinetic energy (KE) formula, if gc = 1 is used, then KE is expressed in foot-poundals; but if gc = 32.174 is used, then KE is expressed in foot-pounds.

Motivations

According to Newton's second law, the force F is proportional to the product of mass m and acceleration a:

Fma

or

F=Kma

If F = 1 lbf, m = 1 lb, and a = Template:Val, then

1lbf=K1lb32.174fts2

Leading to

K=1lbf1lb32.174fts2=0.03108lbfs2lbft

gc is defined as the reciprocal of the constant K

gc=1K=32.174lbftlbfs2

or equivalently, as

gc=maF

Specific systems of units

International System English System 1 English System 2
gc = 1 (kg·m)/(N·s2) gc = 32.174 (lb·ft)/(lbf·s2) gc = 1 (slug·ft)/(lbf·s2)

References

Template:Reflist