Convert Centimeter per Second to Kilometer per Hour (cm/s → km/h)
Centimeters per second measures slow phenomena like ocean currents, biological growth, and geological sedimentation.
Centimeter per Second to Kilometer per Hour Conversion Table
10 common values| Centimeter per Second | Kilometer per Hour |
|---|---|
| 1 cm/s | 0.036 km/h |
| 5 cm/s | 0.18 km/h |
| 10 cm/s | 0.36 km/h |
| 25 cm/s | 0.9 km/h |
| 50 cm/s | 1.8 km/h |
| 100 cm/s | 3.6 km/h |
| 150 cm/s | 5.4 km/h |
| 200 cm/s | 7.2 km/h |
| 300 cm/s | 10.8 km/h |
| 500 cm/s | 18 km/h |
How to Convert Centimeter per Second to Kilometer per Hour Manually
Step by StepConverting centimeters per second to kilometers per hour is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in centimeters per secondStart with the number of centimeters per second (cm/s) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.036The conversion factor from cm/s to km/h is 0.036. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in kilometers per hourThe result is your value in kilometers per hour (km/h).
Formula
Multiply the value in centimeters per second by 0.036. For the reverse direction, multiply by 27.777778.
km/h = cm/s × 0.036cm/s = km/h × 27.777778Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 cm/s = 0.01 m/s = 0.036 km/h.
- Useful when m/s or km/h give awkward small numbers.
- Use consistent metric prefixes to avoid confusion.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Treating cm/s as fast speeds.
- Mixing cm/s with m/s in the same dataset without labels.
- Converting improperly for wind or car speeds — wrong scale.
About Centimeter per Second and Kilometer per Hour
What is the Centimeter per Second?
Centimeters per second is the natural unit for slow, sustained motions: ocean currents, biological growth rates, sedimentation in geology, and laboratory fluid dynamics. The Gulf Stream flows at about 90–250 cm/s, glaciers creep at 1–10 cm/s on average, and fingernails grow at roughly 0.0035 cm/s. Centimeters per second appears in oceanography, hydrology, soil science, and biological motion studies. It relates to m/s (100 cm/s = 1 m/s), km/h (1 cm/s = 0.036 km/h), and mph (1 cm/s ≈ 0.0224 mph). The CGS (centimeter-gram-second) unit system used cm/s as its base speed, which influenced older physics literature, particularly in astrophysics and fluid mechanics.
- Ocean current speeds
- Biological motion (cells, small organisms)
- Laboratory fluid flow rates
Gulf Stream: 100–200 cm/s. Amoeba: 1 mm/s = 0.1 cm/s. Sediment settling: 0.01–1 cm/s.
What is the Kilometer per Hour?
Kilometers per hour is the universal road-speed and weather wind-speed unit in 195 countries — every nation outside the United States, the United Kingdom, and a handful of Caribbean territories. Speed limits on European, Asian, Australian, African, and Latin American roads are posted in km/h: typical urban limits are 50 km/h, highway 100–130 km/h. Weather reports give wind speeds in km/h universally. The unit derives directly from the kilometer (distance) and hour (time): 1 km/h ≈ 0.278 m/s. Car speedometers in metric countries display km/h prominently, with smaller mph numbers for travel to the UK. Olympic 100-meter sprints reach 36–37 km/h, urban cyclists travel at 15–25 km/h, and commercial trains in Europe cruise at 200–300 km/h. The unit relates to mph (1 km/h ≈ 0.621 mph), m/s (3.6 km/h = 1 m/s), and the knot (1 km/h ≈ 0.540 kn).
- European and global road speed limits
- Car and motorcycle speedometers
- Weather wind speed reporting (in some regions)
German Autobahn typical speed: 130 km/h (recommended) to 180+ (no limit sections). French limit: 130 km/h. Urban: 50 km/h.