Information about Electromagnetic Unit

The centimetre-gram-second system (CGS) is a system of physical units. It is always the same for mechanical units, but there are several variants of electric additions. It was replaced by the MKS, or metre-kilogram-second system, which in turn was replaced by the International System of Units (SI), which has the three base units of MKS plus the ampere, mole, candela and kelvin.

Mechanical CGS units
Dimension Unit Definition SI
lengthcentimetre1/100 of metre= 10−2 m
massgram1/1000 of kilogram= 10−3 kg
timesecond1 second= 1 s
forcedyneg cm / s2= 10−5 N
energyergg cm2 / s2= 10−7 J
powererg per secondg cm2 / s3= 10−7 W
pressurebarye (in France)g / (cm s2)= 10−1 Pa
dynamic viscositypoiseg / (cm s)= 10−1 Pa·s


The system goes back to a proposal made in 1832 by the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and was in 1874 extended by the British physicists James Clerk Maxwell and William Thomson with a set of electromagnetic units. The sizes (order of magnitude) of many CGS units turned out to be inconvenient for practical purposes, therefore the CGS system never gained wide general use outside the field of electrodynamics and was gradually superseded internationally starting in the 1880s but not to a significant extent until the mid-20th century by the more practical MKS (metre-kilogram-second) system, which led eventually to the modern SI standard units.

CGS units are still occasionally encountered in technical literature, especially in the United States in the fields of electrodynamics and astronomy. SI units were chosen such that electromagnetic equations concerning spheres contain 4π, those concerning coils contain 2π and those dealing with straight wires lack π entirely, which was the most convenient choice for electrical-engineering applications. In those fields where formulas concerning spheres dominate (for example, astronomy), it has been argued that the CGS system can be notationally slightly more convenient.

Starting from the international adoption of the MKS standard in the 1940s and the SI standard in the 1960s, the technical use of CGS units has gradually disappeared worldwide, in the United States more slowly than in the rest of the world. CGS units are today no longer accepted by the house styles of most scientific journals, textbook publishers and standards bodies, although they are commonly used in astronomical journals such as the Astrophysical Journal.

The units gram and centimetre remain useful within the SI, especially for instructional physics and chemistry experiments, where they match well the small scales of table-top setups. In these uses, they are occasionally referred to as the system of “LAB” units. However, where derived units are needed, the SI ones are generally used and taught today instead of the CGS ones.

Electrostatic units

While for most units the difference between cgs and SI are just powers of 10, the differences in electromagnetic units are more involved; so much so that formulas for physical laws of E&M are adjusted depending on what system of units one uses. In SI, electric current is defined via the magnetic force it exerts and charge is then defined as current multiplied with time. In one variant of the cgs system, electrostatic units (esu), charge is defined via the force it exerts on other charges, and current is then defined as charge per time. One consequence of this approach is that Coulomb’s law does not contain a constant of proportionality. What this means specifically is that in cgs electrostatic units, the unit of charge or statcoulomb, is defined as such a quantity of charge that the Coulomb force constant is set to 1. That is, for two point charges, each with 1 statcoulomb spaced apart by 1 centimetre, the electrostatic force between them will be, by definition, precisely one dyne. This also has the effect of eliminating a separate dimension or fundamental unit for electric charge. In cgs electrostatic units, a statcoulomb is the same as a centimetre times square root of dyne. Dimensionally in the cgs esu system, charge Q is equivalent to M1/2L3/2T-1 and not an independent dimension of physical quantity. This reduction of units is an application of the Buckingham π theorem.

When considering a dielectric in cgs units, the electric displacement D = E, where is the relative dielectric constant and E is the electric field.

While the proportional constants in cgs simplify theoretical calculations, they have the disadvantage that the units in cgs are hard to define through experiment. SI on the other hand starts with a unit of current, the ampere which is easy to determine through experiment, but which requires that the constants in the electromagnetic equations take on odd forms.

Ultimately, relating electromagnetic phenomena to time, length and mass relies on the forces observed on charges. There are two fundamental laws in action: Coulomb’s law, which describes the electrostatic force between charges, and Ampère’s law, which describes the electrodynamic (or electromagnetic) force between currents. Each of these includes one proportionality constant, k1 or k2. The static definition of magnetic fields yields a third proportionality constant, . The first two constants are related to each other through the speed of light, c (the ratio of k1 over k2 must equal c2).

We then have several choices:

k1 k2 α yields
1c−21electrostatic cgs system (esu)
c211electromagnetic cgs system (emu)
1c−2c−1Gaussian cgs system
(4·π·ε0)−1µ0·(4·π)−11SI


Dimension Unit Definition SI
chargeelectrostatic unit of charge, franklin, statcoulomb1 esu = 1 statC = 1 Fr = √(g·cm³/s²)= 3.33564 × 10−10 C
electric current1 esu/s= 3.33564 × 10−10 C/s
electric potentialstatvolt1 statV = 1 erg/esu= 299.792458 V
electric field1 statV/cm = 1 dyn/esu= 2.99792458 × 104 V/m
magnetic field strength Hoersted1 Oe= 1000/(4π) A/m = 79.577 A/m
magnetic fluxmaxwell1 Mw = 1 G·cm²= 10−8 Wb
magnetic induction Bgauss1 G = 1 Mw/cm²= 10−4 T
resistance1 s/cm= 8.988 × 1011 Ω
resistivity1 s= 8.988 × 109 Ω·m
capacitance1 cm= 1.113 × 10−12 F
inductancestatH= 8.988 × 1011 H
wavenumberkayser1 /cm= 100 /m


The mantissas derived from the speed of light are more precisely 299792458, 333564095198152, 1112650056, and 89875517873681764.

A centimetre of capacitance is the capacitance between a sphere of radius 1 cm in vacuum and infinity. The capacitance C between two concentric spheres of radii R and r is
.
By taking the limit as R goes to infinity we see C equals r.

Physical constants in CGS units[1]

Constant Symbol Value
Atomic mass unitu1.660 × 10−24 g
Avogadro constantNA6.022 × 1023 (mol)−1
Bohr magnetonμB9.274 × 10−21 erg/gauss
Bohr radiusao5.291 × 10−9 cm
Boltzmann constantk1.380 × 10−16 erg/K
Electron massme9.109 × 10−28 g
Elementary chargee4.803 × 10−10 esu
Fine-structure constanta7.297 × 10−3
Gravitational constantG6.674 × 10−8 cm3/g-s2
Planck constanth6.626 × 10−27 erg-s
Speed of light in vacuumc2.998 × 1010 cm/s

Other variants

There were at various points in time about half a dozen systems of electromagnetic units in use, most based on the cgs system. These include electromagnetic units (emu, chosen such that the Biot-Savart law has no constant of proportionality), Gaussian units, and Heaviside-Lorentz units.

Further complicating matters is the fact that some physicists and engineers in the United States use hybrid units, such as volts per centimetre for electric field. However, this also can be seen more as an application of the previously described "LAB" units usage since electric fields near small circuit devices would be measured across distances on the order of magnitude of one centimetre.

Pro and contra

A key virtue of the Gaussian CGS system is that electric and magnetic fields have the same units, equals , and the only dimensional constant appearing in the equations is , the speed of light. The Heaviside-Lorentz system has these desirable properties as well (with equalling 1), but is a "rationalized" system (as is SI) in which the charges and fields are defined in such a way that there are many fewer factors of appearing in the formulas, and it is in Heaviside-Lorentz units that the Maxwell equations take their simplest possible form.

At the same time, the elimination of and can also be viewed as a major disadvantage of all the variants of the CGS system. Within classical electrodynamics, this elimination makes sense because it greatly simplifies the Maxwell equations. In quantum electrodynamics, however, the vacuum is no longer just empty space, but it is filled with virtual particles that interact in complicated ways. The fine structure constant in Gaussian CGS is given as and it has been cause to much mystification how its numerical value should be explained. In SI units with it may be clearer that it is in fact the complicated quantum structure of the vacuum that gives rise to a non-trivial vacuum permittivity. However, the advantage would be purely pedagogical, and in practice, SI units are essentially never used in quantum electrodynamics calculations.

See also

References

1. ^ A.P. French, Edwind F. Taylor (1978). An Introduction to Quantum Physics (in English). W.W. Norton & Company. 
  • Griffiths, David J. (1999). "Appendix C: Units", Introduction to Electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-805326-X. 
  • Jackson, John D. (1999). "Appendix on Units and Dimensions", Classical Electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 0-471-30932-X.Wiley"> 
CGS is a three-letter abbreviation with multiple meanings, as described below:
  • Centimeter gram second system of units, a system of physical units
  • Championship Gaming Series
  • Chief of the General Staff, a senior army appointment in several countries


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units of measurement have played a crucial role in human endeavour from early ages up to this day. Disparate systems of measurement used to be very common. Now there is a global standard, the International System (SI) of units, the modern form of the metric system.
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1 metre =
SI units
1000 mm 0 cm
US customary / Imperial units
0 ft 0 in
The metre or meter[1](symbol: m) is the fundamental unit of length in the International System of Units (SI).
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kilogram or kilogramme (symbol: kg) is the SI base unit of mass. The kilogram is defined as being equal to the mass of the International Prototype Kilogram (IPK), which is almost exactly equal to the mass of one liter of water.
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second (SI symbol: s), sometimes abbreviated sec., is the name of a unit of time, and is the International System of Units (SI) base unit of time.

SI prefixes are frequently combined with the word second to denote subdivisions of the second, e.g.
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International System of Units (abbreviated SI from the French Le Système international d'unités) is the modern form of the metric system.
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ampere, in practice often shortened to amp, (symbol: A) is a unit of electric current, or amount of electric charge per second. The ampere is an SI base unit, and is named after André-Marie Ampère, one of the main discoverers of electromagnetism.
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The mole (symbol: mol) is the SI base unit that measures an amount of substance. One mole contains Avogadro's number (approximately 6.0221023) entities.

A mole is much like "a dozen" in that both are absolute numbers (having no units) and can describe any type of
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candela (symbol: cd) is the SI base unit of luminous intensity (that is, power emitted by a light source in a particular direction, with wavelengths weighted by the luminosity function, a standardized model of the sensitivity of the human eye).
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The kelvin (symbol: K) is a unit increment of temperature and is one of the seven SI base units. The Kelvin scale is a thermodynamic (absolute) temperature scale where absolute zero — the coldest possible temperature — is zero kelvins
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Length is the long dimension of any object. The length of a thing is the distance between its ends, its linear extent as measured from end to end. This may be distinguished from height, which is vertical extent, and width or breadth
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1 centimetre =
SI units
010−3 m 0 mm
US customary / Imperial units
010−3 ft 0 in
A centimetre (American spelling: centimeter, symbol cm
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1 metre =
SI units
1000 mm 0 cm
US customary / Imperial units
0 ft 0 in
The metre or meter[1](symbol: m) is the fundamental unit of length in the International System of Units (SI).
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Mass is a fundamental concept in physics, roughly corresponding to the intuitive idea of "how much matter there is in an object". Mass is a central concept of classical mechanics and related subjects, and there are several definitions of mass within the framework of relativistic
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Gram
Unit sign g
Measure Mass
Base Unit Kilogram
Multiple of Base 10−3
System SI, CGS, other
Common usage Commonly used in cooking and food labeling
Examples
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kilogram or kilogramme (symbol: kg) is the SI base unit of mass. The kilogram is defined as being equal to the mass of the International Prototype Kilogram (IPK), which is almost exactly equal to the mass of one liter of water.
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time.

One view is that time is part of the fundamental structure of the universe, a dimension in which events occur in sequence, and time itself is something that can be measured.
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second (SI symbol: s), sometimes abbreviated sec., is the name of a unit of time, and is the International System of Units (SI) base unit of time.

SI prefixes are frequently combined with the word second to denote subdivisions of the second, e.g.
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second (SI symbol: s), sometimes abbreviated sec., is the name of a unit of time, and is the International System of Units (SI) base unit of time.

SI prefixes are frequently combined with the word second to denote subdivisions of the second, e.g.
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In physics, force is an action or agency that causes a body of mass m to accelerate. It may be experienced as a lift, a push, or a pull. The acceleration of the body is proportional to the vector sum of all forces acting on it (known as net force or resultant force).
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Dynes redirects here. For the president of the University of California system, see Robert C. Dynes.


In physics, the dyne (symbol "dyn") is a unit of force specified in the centimeter-gram-second
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The newton (symbol: N) is the SI derived unit of force, named after Sir Isaac Newton in recognition of his work on classical mechanics.

Definition

A newton
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energy (from the Greek ενεργός, energos, "active, working")[1] is a scalar physical quantity that is a property of objects and systems of objects which is conserved by nature.
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For other uses see Erg (disambiguation)


An erg is the unit of energy and mechanical work in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units, symbol "erg". Its name is derived from the Greek word meaning "work".
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The joule (IPA: [dʒuːl] or [dʒaʊl]) (symbol: J) is the SI unit of energy.
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In physics, power (symbol: P) is the rate at which work is performed or energy is transmitted, or the amount of energy required or expended for a given unit of time.
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For other uses see Erg (disambiguation)


An erg is the unit of energy and mechanical work in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units, symbol "erg". Its name is derived from the Greek word meaning "work".
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second (SI symbol: s), sometimes abbreviated sec., is the name of a unit of time, and is the International System of Units (SI) base unit of time.

SI prefixes are frequently combined with the word second to denote subdivisions of the second, e.g.
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WATT

City of license Cadillac, Michigan
Broadcast area [1]
Branding NewsTalk 1240
First air date 1945
Frequency 1240 kHz
Format News-Talk-Sports
Power 1,000 watts
Class C
Owner MacDonald Garber Broadcasting
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Pressure (symbol: p) is the force per unit area applied on a surface in a direction perpendicular to that surface.

Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure.
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