The benz, named in honour of
Karl Benz, has been proposed as a name for one metre per second.[10] Although it has seen some support as a practical unit,[11] primarily from German sources,[10] it was rejected as the SI unit of velocity[12] and has not seen widespread use or acceptance.[13]
Unicode character
The "metre per second" symbol is encoded by
Unicode at code point U+33A7㎧SQUARE M OVER S.[14]
^Dinçer, İbrahim; Rosen, Marc A. (2007). EXERGY: Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development. Amsterdam: Elsevier. p. 444.
ISBN9780080531359.
OCLC228148217.
^Jazar, Reza N. (2017). Vehicle Dynamics: Theory and Application (3. ed.). Cham, Switzerland: Springer. p. 957.
ISBN9783319534411.
OCLC988750637.
^Collinson, R.P.G. (2013). Introduction to Avionics Systems (2. ed.). Boston: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 16.
ISBN9781441974662.
OCLC861706692.
^Das, Braja M.; Kassimali, Aslam; Sami, Sedat (2010). Mechanics for Engineers: Statics. Ft. Lauderdale, FL: J. Ross Publishing. p. 556.
ISBN9781604270297.
OCLC419827343.
^Wright, Gus (2015). Fundamentals of medium/heavy duty diesel engines. Burlington, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 1349.
ISBN9781284067057.
OCLC927104266.
^
abKlein HA. (2011). The Science of Measurement: A Historical Survey. Dover Publications. p. 695.
ISBN978-0486258393.
^Heijungs R. (2005). "On the Use of Units in LCA". The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment. 10 (3): 174.
doi:
10.1065/lca2005.02.199.
S2CID110961104.
^Dresner S. (1974). Units of Measurement: An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Units Both Scientific and Popular and the Quantities They Measure. Harvey Miller and Medcalf. p. 13.
ISBN978-0-85602-036-0.