Converting Between MKS and CGS Unit Systems: Tips and Tricks?

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Converting between MKS and CGS unit systems can be challenging due to differing factors, such as the presence of a 2π in electric field equations. It is often recommended to work in the unit system required for the final output, especially when writing papers, to avoid confusion. Some users prefer to convert all information to SI units for calculations and then revert to CGS, while others suggest focusing on dimensional analysis and concepts rather than getting bogged down by unit conversions. Awareness of the specific equations and their variations in different unit systems is crucial to avoid errors. Overall, familiarity with both systems and strategic approaches can ease the transition between MKS and CGS.
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"cgs" unit systems

i'm used to mks unit systems, but i have to read a book with cgs recently.

it's difficult for me to transform it between them.

can anyguys give me some advises to deal with it !

thanks for responds!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Distances are a 100x bigger than they should be, masses are 1000x
The electric field equations are generally missing a 2pi
At least seconds are the same!

CGS is still very common in astronomy
 
yes,that's right.
but i want know how should i deal with it.
should i transform the CGS formulas to MKS or directly deduce in CGS,or someother manner.
 
The appendix in Jackson gives a good review of various units. I've never found shifting between units to be a big deal myself.
 
enricfemi said:
yes,that's right.
but i want know how should i deal with it.
should i transform the CGS formulas to MKS or directly deduce in CGS,or someother manner.

The easiest thing, for me at least, is to work in whatever units you want the result to be in when finished. If you're writing for a paper, for instance, that wants things in CGS, then start in that format. It's a lot easier than doing it in other units and then translating it. If you're just doing something for yourself, then use whatever you're most comfortable with.
 
Sheets said:
The appendix in Jackson gives a good review of various units. I've never found shifting between units to be a big deal myself.

But it still creates a lot of problems. Just last week a colleague of mine was reading two papers where the respective authors got different results after performing nominally identical experiments. After a while she realized that the reason was that there was a 2pi missing in a formula in one of them; the authors were -apparently without realizing it- using a formula taken from a book written using cgs units but the experimental data and all the other formulas were in SI. Hence, when they fitted their data they came to the wrong conclusion.
A silly misstake, but sometimes it is far from obvious that there is a 2pi missing in a complicated expression (I have made the same misstake using the same book, but fortunately never in anything that I have published).
 
enricfemi said:
i'm used to mks unit systems, but i have to read a book with cgs recently.

it's difficult for me to transform it between them.

can anyguys give me some advises to deal with it !

thanks for responds!

It can be very confusing- MKS, CGS, 'natural', Gaussian, etc. etc. My only advice is not to get bogged down in the details; like always trying to convert miles-per-hour to m/s. Instead, focus on the concepts, get used to doing dimensional analysis, stuff like that.
 
Danger said:
The easiest thing, for me at least, is to work in whatever units you want the result to be in when finished. If you're writing for a paper, for instance, that wants things in CGS, then start in that format. It's a lot easier than doing it in other units and then translating it. If you're just doing something for yourself, then use whatever you're most comfortable with.

This is easy at the condition that the equations are the same in the two systems of units, i.e. that the factors are the same. However when the equations are different (like different factors of 2 \pi, \epsilon_0 ,etc) then it's a pain in the neck because every time you use a formula that you remember from undergraduate physics, you never know if it's still valid in those other units (example: you calculate the B field produced by an infinite wire and you are in cgs...can you use \frac{\mu_0 I}{2 \pi r}, you wonder...)

I personally prefer to convert all the information given to SI units, calculaet everything with formula I know and cherish and convert back to cgs at the end.

But it's a matter of taste.

The key point is to know or to have handy all the equations required in the system of units one is working with.
 
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Very good point, Kdv; I never even thought of the formulae changing. :redface:
 
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