Property:HasDescription
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| ID | HasDescription |
| UUID | 2112e551-2c06-4e1c-95bc-894d652cdbab |
| Label | HasDescription |
| Machine compatible name | HasDescription |
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Description
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| name | "HasDescription" | |||||
| property_type | "Monolingual text" | |||||
| uuid | "2112e551-2c06-4e1c-95bc-894d652cdbab" | |||||
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L
A logarithmic unit is a unit that can be used to express a quantity (physical or mathematical) on a logarithmic scale, that is, as being proportional to the value of a logarithm function applied to the ratio of the quantity and a reference quantity of the same type. (en) +
The class of units with dimensionality 'LuminousIntensity'. (en) +
C
Candela per Lumen. (en) +
F
Unit for fractions of quantities of the same kind, to aid the understanding of the quantity being expressed. (en) +
C
The candela per square metre (cd/m²) is the derived SI unit of luminance. The unit is based on the candela, the SI unit of luminous intensity, and the square metre, the SI unit of area. Nit (nt) is a deprecated non-SI name also used for this unit (1 nit = 1 cd/m²). As a measure of light emitted per unit area, this unit is frequently used to specify the brightness of a display device. Most consumer desktop liquid crystal displays have luminances of 200 to 300 cd/m²; the sRGB spec for monitors targets 80 cd/m2. HDTVs range from 450 to about 1000 cd/m2. Typically, calibrated monitors should have a brightness of 120 cd/m². Nit is believed to come from the Latin word nitere, to shine.
-- QUDT (en) +
L
The class of units with dimensionality 'Luminance'. (en) +
C
A CentiCoulomb is 10⁻² C.
-- QUDT (en) +
Superclass for all units prefixed with "centi" (0.01). (en) +
G
A unit of mass in the metric system. The name comes from the Greek gramma, a small weight identified in later Roman and Byzantine times with the Latin scripulum or scruple (the English scruple is equal to about 1.3 grams). The gram was originally defined to be the mass of one cubic centimeter of pure water, but to provide precise standards it was necessary to construct physical objects of specified mass. One gram is now defined to be 1/1000 of the mass of the standard kilogram, a platinum-iridium bar carefully guarded by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Paris for more than a century. (The kilogram, rather than the gram, is considered the base unit of mass in the SI.) The gram is a small mass, equal to about 15.432 grains or 0.035 273 966 ounce.
-- QUDT (en) +
M
C
A centimetre is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one hundredth of a metre, which is the SI base unit of length. Centi is the SI prefix for a factor of 10. The centimetre is the base unit of length in the now deprecated centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units.
-- QUDT (en) +
0,01-fold of the SI base unit metre divided by the SI base unit kelvin
-- QUDT (en) +
M
Metre per Kelvin. (en) +
L
The class of units with dimensionality 'LengthPerTemperature'. (en) +
C
"Centimeter per Second" is a C.G.S System unit for 'Linear Velocity' expressed as cm/s.
-- QUDT (en) +
M
Metre per second is an SI derived unit of both speed (scalar) and velocity (vector quantity which specifies both magnitude and a specific direction), defined by distance in metres divided by time in seconds.
The official SI symbolic abbreviation is mu00b7s-1, or equivalently either m/s.
-- QUDT (en) +
S
C
`Centimeter per Square Second` is a C.G.S System unit for `Linear Acceleration` expressed as cm/s².
-- QUDT (en) +
M
The `meter per Square second` is the unit of acceleration in the International System of Units (SI). As a derived unit it is composed from the SI base units of length, the metre, and the standard unit of time, the second. Its symbol is written in several forms as m/s², or m s⁻². As acceleration, the unit is interpreted physically as change in velocity or speed per time interval, that is, `metre per second per second`.
-- QUDT (en) +