[volume]+1[mol]-1
If any other units are used, the value will be different. --Depending on the units you chose the value of the constant differs
G is the universal gravitational constant. It is basically a conversion factor to adjust the number and units so they come out to the correct value. This is a universal constant so it is true everywhere.
Planck's Constant units are energy-seconds. Planck's Constant is the product of two fundamental Quantum constants, W and C. W is the magnetic charge of "free space" and C is the electric charge of "free space". The value of W= 500 atto Webers and C= 4/3 atto Coulombs. The "free space" impedance z is the ratio of the two quantum constants z=W/C = 375 Ohms.
1,130 Imperial Units (ft lb/slug oR)
"10 miles per second" is not an acceleration, it is a speed. An acceleration has two time units, or a time unit squared, for example, "9.8 meters / second2".
The value of Planck's constant depends on the system of units that are being used. The SI units are designed mainly for everyday measurements, where energies are usually of the order of kilojoules and a small period of time is a minute or second. However, the Planck's constant applies events at a subatomic scale so that these "normal" measurement units are not inappropriate.So the question changes in which units would the Plank's constant become 1. Further, the answer depends on how that change is achieved.
motion is always measured in meters > uniform - constant - unchanging constant speed (SI units - metres per second)
Exactly in the order in which they're listed in the question.
That is a measure of acceleration, so if you know the velocity and divide it by the time, it should give you the correct units,
units of speed = units of distance/units of time Examples: miles per hour (mi/hr), meters per second (m/s), kilometers per hour (km/hr).
The units are m-1 or per metre.
The units for the gas constant of 0.0821 are liter-atmospheres/mole-Kelvin
the acid ionization constant (Ka) has no units
Unit of Phase constant is Radians per metre .
The units for Rydberg's constant are [L-1].
If any other units are used, the value will be different. --Depending on the units you chose the value of the constant differs