Convert Centimeter/Second (cm/s) to Mile/Hour (mi/h) instantly.
Centimeter/Second to Mile/Hour conversion
1 Centimeter/Second (cm/s) = 0.022369363 Mile/Hour (mi/h). To convert Centimeter/Second to Mile/Hour, multiply the value by 0.022369363.
| Centimeter/Second (cm/s) | Mile/Hour (mi/h) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.022369363 |
| 2 | 0.044738726 |
| 5 | 0.11184681 |
| 10 | 0.22369363 |
| 25 | 0.55923407 |
| 50 | 1.1184681 |
| 100 | 2.2369363 |
| 1000 | 22.369363 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Mile/Hour are in one Centimeter/Second?
One Centimeter/Second (cm/s) equals 0.022369363 Mile/Hour (mi/h).
How do I convert Centimeter/Second to Mile/Hour?
To convert Centimeter/Second to Mile/Hour, multiply the value by 0.022369363.
What is 10 Centimeter/Second in Mile/Hour?
10 Centimeter/Second = 0.22369363 Mile/Hour.
About these units
Centimeter/Second (cm/s)
A centimeter per second is widely used in hydrology, biology, and physics to measure modest fluid flows, blood velocities, small organism movement, or lab-scale chemical transport. In medicine, cm/s is important in Doppler ultrasound, where blood flow speeds in arteries and veins are routinely measured. In physical sciences, cm/s appears in low-speed fluid mechanics experiments, sediment transport studies, and oceanographic microcurrent analysis. It offers a convenient, human-comprehensible scale for small but dynamic systems.
Mile/Hour (mi/h)
The mile per hour represents the number of miles traveled in one hour and is commonly used in the United States, the UK (in road contexts), and several other countries with legacy imperial systems. mph is deeply woven into cultural habits: driver training, speed limits, vehicular performance, and even athletic achievements are often expressed in miles per hour. In science and engineering, however, mph is rarely used because the mile and hour are not SI units. Still, mph retains strong emotional and historical associations—for example, the significance of a car "breaking 200 mph" or the legendary "88 mph" in popular culture. It persists because measurement units often survive long after their historical origins fade.