How do you convert the unit of self-inductance (H) to kg*m2 (squared) / C ?
I thought the answer should turn out to be:
Kg * m squared / C squared
(I don't know how to type the superscript squared.)
Is there a typo in my book?
Please help.
Lisa
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How do you convert the unit of self-inductance (H) to kg*m2 (squared) / C ?
I thought the answer should turn out to be:
Kg * m squared / C squared
(I don't know how to type the superscript squared.)
Is there a typo in my book?
Please help.
Lisa
Maybe somebody that has worked with this stuff more recently than I have will be more helpful. My old physics book defines a henry as a weber-turn per ampere. I think the weber-turn is a dimentionless count, leaving only ampere^-1 to convert to mass, time, and distance units. ^-1 is a conventional way to say to the minus one power using text. Squared would be ^2. Good luck. Personally I like my units as real units. I was happier with dynes/cm^2 than pascals.
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