Siemens (unit)

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The siemens (symbol: S) is the SI derived unit of electric conductance. It is named after the German inventor and industrialist Ernst Werner von Siemens, and is equivalent to the now-obsolete mho. In English, it is siemens in both singular and plural.

Definition

For a device with electrical resistance R, the conductance G is defined as

<math>G = \frac1R = \frac{I}V, </math>

where

The unit siemens for the conductance G is defined by 1 S = 1 A/V = 1 A2/W = 1 kg−1·m−2·s3·A2 =1 Ω-1 = 1 kg−1·m−2·s1·C2.

Example: The conductance of a resistor with resistance 6 ohms is G = 1/(6 Ω) = 0.16... S.

SI multiples

Template:SI multiples

Mho

The siemens is equivalent to the now obsolete mho unit, which was derived from spelling ohm backwards and written with an upside-down capital Greek letter Omega: <math>\mho</math>, Unicode symbol is U+2127 (℧). The term siemens, as it is an SI unit, is used universally in science and primarily in electrical applications, while mho is still used primarily in electronic applications. The upside down ohm symbol, while not an official SI unit, has the advantage of being less likely to be confused with a variable than the letter S when doing algebraic calculations by hand, where the usual typographical distinctions (such as italic for variables and roman for unit names) are difficult to maintain. Furthermore, in some industries (like electronics) it is common to incorrectly write the symbol for second as S instead of s, causing potential confusion.

Template:SI unit lowercasebg:Сименс cs:Siemens da:Siemens (ledningsevneenhed) de:Siemens (Einheit) es:Siemens (unidad) fr:Siemens (unité) he:סימנס ja:ジーメンス (単位) mk:Сименс (единица) nl:Siemens (eenheid) pl:Simens pt:Siemens (unidade) ru:Сименс (единица измерения) sr:Сименс (јединица)