Centimeters (cm) to Meters (m) Conversion
Centimeters
The centimetre is a unit of length equal to one hundredth of a metre (10⁻² m), derived using the SI prefix centi- (from Latin centum, meaning hundred). It is widely used in everyday measurement of body height, garment sizing, and small objects, and is the standard unit in medicine, tailoring, and interior design. In the CGS (centimetre-gram-second) system that preceded modern SI, the centimetre served as the fundamental unit of length, giving rise to derived units such as the dyne and erg still encountered in physics literature.
Meters
The metre is the SI base unit of length, defined since 1983 as the distance light travels in a vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second, anchoring its definition to a universal physical constant rather than any material artefact. Introduced by the French Academy of Sciences in 1791 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole, the metre became the cornerstone of the metric system and is today the official unit of length in every country that has adopted SI. In science and engineering, virtually all derived units of length, area, volume, and many physical quantities are expressed in terms of the metre.
| Centimeters (cm) | Meters (m) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 cm | 0.001 m |
| 1 cm | 0.01 m |
| 2 cm | 0.02 m |
| 3 cm | 0.03 m |
| 5 cm | 0.05 m |
| 10 cm | 0.1 m |
| 20 cm | 0.2 m |
| 30 cm | 0.3 m |
| 50 cm | 0.5 m |
| 100 cm | 1 m |
| 1000 cm | 10 m |