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Calorie (IT) per Minute per Square Centimeter [cal(IT)/(min·cm²)]


The unit calorie (IT) per minute per square centimeter, written as cal(IT)/(min·cm²), measures heat flux density or thermal power per unit area using the International Table calorie (1 cal(IT) = 4.1868 J). It represents the amount of heat energy transferred through 1 cm² of surface every minute.


This unit is commonly used in laboratory calorimetry, solar energy experiments, and material testing where small surface areas and the calorie unit are convenient. Typical applications include:



  • Measuring solar radiation intensity on small surfaces



  • Calorimetry experiments with samples



  • Thermal testing of materials under concentrated energy flux



Mathematically, the heat flux is expressed as:


q=QAtq = \frac{Q}{A \cdot t}

where q is heat flux in cal(IT)/(min·cm²), Q is energy in calories, A is area in cm², and t is time in minutes.


Conversion to SI units:


1cal(IT)/(min\cdotpcm²)697.8W/m²1 \, \text{cal(IT)/(min·cm²)} \approx 697.8 \, \text{W/m²}

While SI units like W/m² are standard, cal(IT)/(min·cm²) remains convenient in small-scale experiments and historical calorimetric studies, providing an intuitive measure of energy transfer per minute per small surface area.


Dyne per Hour per Centimeter [dyne/(h·cm)]


The unit dyne per hour per centimeter, written as dyne/(h·cm), measures force per unit length over time, often used in contexts such as viscous drag, material creep, or very slow mechanical processes in cgs (centimeter-gram-second) units.


A dyne is the cgs unit of force, defined as the force required to accelerate 1 gram of mass by 1 cm/s². Therefore, 1 dyne = 10⁻⁵ newtons in SI units. The additional division by centimeter represents a per-unit-length measure, and division by hour accounts for time rate.


Mathematically, the quantity can be expressed as:


Frate=FLtF_\text{rate} = \frac{F}{L \cdot t}

where F is force in dynes, L is length in cm, and t is time in hours.


Applications include:



  • Creep or stress studies in materials under very small forces over long periods



  • Lubrication or viscous flow measurements in cgs-based engineering studies



  • Experimental mechanics where small forces per unit length are measured over extended time



Conversion to SI units:


1dyne/(h\cdotpcm)2.78×109N/(m\cdotps)1 \, \text{dyne/(h·cm)} \approx 2.78 \times 10^{-9} \, \text{N/(m·s)}

This unit is largely of historical or specialized interest but provides a precise cgs-based measure for extremely slow, small-force phenomena.





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