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Convert Meter per square second to Standard gravity (g)

Convert Meter per square second to Standard gravity (g), accelerometer readouts, and vehicle testing.

By Jeff Beem

Convert m/s² to g

Enter a value in meter per square second [m/s²] to see standard gravity (g) [g], or vice versa.

0.101971621298

Formula: 1 m/s² = 0.101971621298 g

What this conversion means in practice

Integrated accelerations in m/s² sometimes need g for shaker controllers, aerospace briefings, or vibration severity grades that stay nondimensionalized in g.

The exact relationship here is 1 m/s² = 0.101971621298 g, consistent with expressing both units relative to meters per square second (m/s²).

How to convert meter per square second to standard gravity (g)

Multiply the meter per square second value by 0.101971621298 to get standard gravity (g).

Example: 1 m/s² × 0.101971621298 = 0.101971621298 g.

Meter per square second and Standard gravity (g)

This focused page locks to the unit pair above so you can quote or audit one factor without scrolling the full dropdown list. For context on other rows, open the parent converter from the site navigation.

Meter per square second to Standard gravity (g) conversion table

Meter per square second (m/s²)Standard gravity (g) (g)
0.1 m/s²0.01019716213 g
1 m/s²0.101971621298 g
2 m/s²0.203943242596 g
5 m/s²0.509858106489 g
10 m/s²1.019716212978 g
20 m/s²2.039432425956 g
50 m/s²5.09858106489 g
100 m/s²10.197162129779 g

Meter per square second to Standard gravity (g) FAQ

m/s² to g: local gravity versus standard g₀ clarifications.

How do I convert m/s² to g?

Multiply the value in m/s² by 0.101971621298 to obtain g. That factor is the ratio of the two units in the same base system as the site’s full converter.

Is this factor the same as the main converter tool?

Yes. The numeric relationship uses the same unit definitions and base normalization as the corresponding converter on CalcRegistry.

Why might my hand calculation differ slightly?

Rounding after intermediate steps, display precision limits, or mixing alternate definitions (for example different “horsepower” variants) can shift the last digits. Use this page’s factor end-to-end for consistency.