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sambob | 21:22 Mon 21st Aug 2006 | Science
4 Answers
What is the SI of A when

A= square root of (hc divided by G)

Whereby SI unit of h is J
SI of c is m s-1
SI of G is J m Kg-2
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I reckon it's
kg s^ -1/2
Yeah so do I, this a straighforward dimensional analysis thingey.

A is J m s-1 over J M kg-2

Js and Ms cancel so you dont even have to worry about that a J is - ML2T-2 in case you were wondering

This leaves you with M2/T

take a sqr

and this should as B says give you kg per root sec.
and the dimension is MT-1/2

or womething, anyway on those lines
(PM) = Planck's mass = √ hc/G = ~ 2.17645 � 10-8 kg
Totally wrong.

SI= A-c (m-1) where as SI=J-kg+2+h+j

Easy.

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