What is centimetre per second?

Centimetre per second is a unit of speed used in low-velocity applications such as biological locomotion studies, microfluidics research, and slow-moving mechanical systems.

Real-world uses

Centimetres per second is used in the CGS system for fluid flow rates, sedimentation velocities in geology, and blood flow measurements in medical Doppler ultrasound. Glacier movement and tectonic plate motion are sometimes expressed in cm/s or cm/year.

History

Centimetres per second was the standard velocity unit in the CGS (centimetre-gram-second) system, widely used in physics until the mid-20th century. While SI uses m/s, cm/s persists in certain scientific fields, particularly fluid mechanics and geophysics.

Common mistakes

Confusing cm/s with m/s by forgetting the factor-of-100 difference. Also, assuming cm/s is too small for practical use—blood flow in major arteries is typically 10–40 cm/s, which is a very practical range.

What is mile per hour?

Mile per hour is a unit of speed equal to one mile travelled in one hour. It is the standard unit for road speeds, vehicle performance ratings, and weather reports in the United States and United Kingdom.

Real-world uses

Miles per hour is the standard speed unit for road traffic in the United States, the United Kingdom, and a few other countries. Baseball pitching speed, hurricane wind categories (Saffir-Simpson scale), and NASCAR race speeds are quoted in mph.

History

Miles per hour became the standard speed expression in English-speaking countries with the advent of railways and later automobiles. The first US speed limit (8 mph in New York City, 1901) and British speed cameras use mph as the legal standard.

Common mistakes

Assuming mph-to-km/h conversion is a simple ×1.5—the actual factor is 1.609. Also, forgetting that UK and US speed limits both use mph, which can mislead visitors from metric countries into driving too fast or too slow.

When is this conversion used?

Converting between centimetre per second and mile per hour is common when working across metric and imperial systems, such as international trade, travel between countries with different measurement standards, or following instructions from a different region. Speed limits, vehicle speedometers, and weather reports for wind speeds use different units depending on the country, making km/h to mph conversion one of the most practical speed conversions.

Worked examples

1 centimetre per second = 0.02236936 mile per hour

1 mile per hour = 0.44704 metre per second

How to convert centimetre per second to mile per hour

To convert centimetre per second to mile per hour, multiply the value by 0.02236936.

To convert mile per hour back to centimetre per second, multiply by 44.704.

Measurement standards

The SI unit of speed is metres per second (m/s), a derived unit requiring no independent definition. The knot is defined as exactly one nautical mile (1,852 metres) per hour and is sanctioned for maritime and aeronautical navigation by the International Civil Aviation Organization.

Did you know?

The fastest human-made object is the Parker Solar Probe, which reached 635,266 km/h (about 176 km/s) in 2024 during a close pass of the Sun — fast enough to travel from New York to Tokyo in under a minute.

Quick reference: centimetre per second to mile per hour

centimetre per secondmile per hour
0.10.00223694
0.50.01118468
10.02236936
20.04473873
50.11184681
100.22369363
250.55923407
501.11846815
1002.23693629
2505.59234073
50011.18468146
1,00022.36936292

Common values

centimetre per secondmile per hour
Walking speed140 centimetre per second3.13171081 mile per hour
City speed limit1,390 centimetre per second31.09341446 mile per hour
Highway driving3,130 centimetre per second70.01610594 mile per hour
Commercial aircraft25,000 centimetre per second559.23407301 mile per hour
Speed of sound (sea level)34,029 centimetre per second761.20705082 mile per hour