- Metre-tonne-second system of units
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The metre-tonne-second or mts system of units is a system of physical units. It was invented in France, hence the unit names sthène and pièze, and was adopted only by the Soviet Union in 1933, and abolished there in 1955. It was built on the same principles as the cgs system, but with larger units for industrial use. The cgs system on the other hand was regarded as suitable for laboratory use only.
Units
The base units of the mts system are as follows:
- length: metre
- volume: cubic metre
- 1 m3 ≡ 1kL
- mass: tonne,
- 1 t ≡ 103 kg
- time: second
- force: sthène,
- 1 sn ≡ 1 t·m/s2 = 103 N = 1 kN
- energy: sthene-metre = kilojoule,
- 1 sn·m ≡ 1 t·m2/s2 = 103 J = 1 kJ
- power: sthene-metre per second = kilowatt,
- 1 sn·m/s ≡ 1 t·m2/s3 = 103 W = 1 kW
- pressure: pièze,
- 1 pz ≡ 1 t/m·s2 = 103 Pa = 1 kPa
Systems of measurement Metric systems International System of Units · metre-kilogram-second · centimetre-gram-second · metre-tonne-second · gravitational system
Natural units Geometric · Planck · Stoney · Lorentz–Heaviside · Atomic · Quantum chromodynamical
Conventional systems Astronomical · Electrical · Temperature
Customary systems Avoirdupois · Apothecaries' · British Imperial · Burmese · Canadian · Chinese · Cornish · Danish · Dutch · English · Finnish · French · German · Hindu · Hong Kong · Irish · Japanese · Maltese · Norwegian · Pegu · Polish · Portuguese · Romanian · Russian · Scottish · Spanish · Swedish · Taiwanese · Tatar · Turkish · Troy · United States
Ancient systems Greek · Roman · Egyptian · Hebrew · Arabic · Mesopotamian · Persian · Indian
Other systems Categories:- Systems of units
- Non-SI metric units
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