Module acceleration

Expand description

Acceleration (base unit meter per second squared, m · s⁻²).

Structs§

attometer_per_second_squared
attometers per second squared
centimeter_per_second_squared
centimeters per second squared
decameter_per_second_squared
decameters per second squared
decimeter_per_second_squared
decimeters per second squared
exameter_per_second_squared
exameters per second squared
femtometer_per_second_squared
femtometers per second squared
foot_per_second_squared
feet per second squared
galileo
galileos
gigameter_per_second_squared
gigameters per second squared
hectometer_per_second_squared
hectometers per second squared
inch_per_second_squared
inches per second squared
kilometer_per_second_squared
kilometers per second squared
megameter_per_second_squared
megameters per second squared
meter_per_second_squared
meters per second squared
micrometer_per_second_squared
micrometers per second squared
millimeter_per_minute_squared
millimeters per minute squared
millimeter_per_second_squared
millimeters per second squared
nanometer_per_second_squared
nanometers per second squared
petameter_per_second_squared
petameters per second squared
picometer_per_second_squared
picometers per second squared
standard_gravity
standard accelerations of gravity
terameter_per_second_squared
terameters per second squared
yoctometer_per_second_squared
yoctometers per second squared
yottameter_per_second_squared
yottameters per second squared
zeptometer_per_second_squared
zeptometers per second squared
zettameter_per_second_squared
zettameters per second squared

Enums§

Units
Unit enum.

Traits§

Conversion
Trait to identify units which have a conversion factor for the Quantity. See [crate::Conversion<V>].
Unit
Marker trait to identify measurement units for the quantity. See Unit.

Functions§

description
Quantity description.
units
Iterate over all defined units for this quantity.

Type Aliases§

Acceleration
Acceleration (base unit meter per second squared, m · s⁻²).
Dimension
Dimension of acceleration, LT⁻² (base unit meter per second squared, m · s⁻²).