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Statmho per Centimeter (statmho/cm)
The statmho per centimeter (statmho/cm) is a unit of electrical conductivity in the electrostatic centimeter-gram-second (CGS) system of units. Here, statmho is the CGS unit of conductance, equivalent to the reciprocal of the statohm (the CGS unit of resistance). When divided by length in centimeters, statmho/cm measures how well a material conducts electricity per unit length.
In simpler terms, electrical conductivity indicates how easily electric current can flow through a material. The higher the conductivity (more statmho/cm), the better the material conducts electricity.
While the statmho/cm is part of the older CGS system, todayβs SI system uses siemens per meter (S/m) for conductivity. However, statmho/cm is still useful in certain theoretical and historical contexts, especially in electromagnetic theory and classical physics.
To convert from statmho/cm to siemens per meter, specific conversion factors related to the permittivity of free space and unit scaling are applied, because CGS and SI systems differ fundamentally.
Abmho per Centimeter [abmho/cm]
The abmho per centimeter (symbol: abmho/cm) is a unit of electrical conductivity in the electromagnetic centimeter-gram-second (CGS-EMU) system of units. The abmho is the CGS-EMU unit of conductance, representing the reciprocal of the abohm (the CGS unit of resistance in the electromagnetic system). When expressed per centimeter, abmho/cm measures the electrical conductivity of a material per unit length.
Electrical conductivity indicates how easily electric current flows through a material β higher conductivity means better conduction. The abmho/cm is used in certain scientific and engineering contexts, particularly within CGS electromagnetic unit systems.
In the International System of Units (SI), electrical conductivity is measured in siemens per meter (S/m). To convert from abmho/cm to siemens per meter, appropriate conversion factors must be applied because CGS-EMU and SI units differ fundamentally.
Though largely replaced by SI units in modern practice, abmho/cm remains relevant in specialized fields, historical references, and theoretical analyses involving electromagnetic units.
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