Exanewton [EN]
Exanewton is an extremely large unit of force in the International System of Units (SI).
1 exanewton (EN) equals newtons.
It is used to describe unimaginably large forces, far beyond typical everyday or industrial scales.
Such magnitudes might appear in astrophysics or theoretical physics when dealing with forces on cosmic scales.
For context:
This unit is mostly theoretical and rarely used in practical measurements due to its enormous size.
Pound Foot per Square Second [lbf·ft/s²]
This unit represents a torque or moment of force per unit time squared (though it’s an uncommon combination and can sometimes be context-specific).
It combines pound-force (lbf), a unit of force, with foot (ft), a unit of length, divided by second squared (s²), a unit of time squared.
It may be used in dynamics or rotational mechanics when dealing with angular accelerations or rate changes of torque.
In basic terms:
1 lbf\cdotpft/s2=force×distance÷time2
1 lbf\cdotpft/s2≈1.35582 N\cdotpm/s2
No conversions available for force.