After setting foot on the Moon, the next destination for humankind is Mars, which presents a whole new set of challenges in speedy, long-distance space travel.
After setting foot on the Moon, the next destination for humankind is Mars, which presents a whole new set of challenges in speedy, long-distance space travel.
The international standard is km/h.
Why not using SI units and m/s?
km/h is an SI unit.
I’m sorry to be a stickler, but it’s not an SI unit.
Have a look at p. 145 and “Non-SI units that are accepted for use with the SI”, if you want to know more: https://www.bipm.org/documents/20126/41483022/SI-Brochure-9.pdf/fcf090b2-04e6-88cc-1149-c3e029ad8232?version=1.22
Hey, no need to be sorry. I appreciate the search for correctness and especially the reference document.
Here’s what I’ve found.
There is no mention of
km/hin section 4, “Non-SI units that are accepted for use with the SI”. It does mentionh, making it a “non-SI unit that’s accepted for use with the SI.”km/his its own unit separate fromh. It’s a unit of speed, derived fromkmandh.My gut feel at this point is that
km/hcould be an SI unit since it’s a unit of speed derived from an SI unit for distance and a non-SI unit accepted for use with the SI for time.Furthermore, searching the document for mentions of
km/h, there’s this bit on page 127, section 2.1, “Defining the unit of a quantity”:This paragraph suggests (even though it doesn’t outright say it) that
km/his indeed an SI unit.I haven’t found anything clearly saying whether
km/his an SI unit or not. Not on that document, not by searching the web. The research above makes me lean towards the idea that it is one.If you found otherwise, I’d love to compare notes and learn further.
I see it quite simplistic: if it isn’t listed as SI unit by the BIPM it isn’t one.
Lending a helping hand on how to deal with derived units (e.g. km/h) doesn’t mean those derived units are endorsed as SI units.
But that’s just my point of view.