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On Thu, 25 Sep 2003 23:28:25 -0400, "J. McLaughlin"
wrote: Wow! In SI: force is in Newtons mass is in kg distance is in meters time is in seconds - and answers are always in SI units if you use SI units. A mass in a gravitational field has a force associated. That force is not a mass even if it is (some of the time) proportional to mass. When certain kinds of engineers provide me with specifications involving pounds I shudder. Each use is converted into its equivalent in SI. The context helps. An assumption of the strength of the gravitational field needs to be used. Then I evaluate their work using SI (and the same assumption about the gravitational field). In SI, force and mass are quite distinct. I continue to be amazed by the awesome ability of some engineers to use a single term for two entirely different things. It helps to be too stupid to know that there are in fact two entirely different things. There are several of those people in this thread. Not for the accuracy of the result, of course. But you can blithely plug in the numbers and get an answer of some sort. Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
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