length ---- meter ---- m
mass ---- kilogram ---- kg
time ---- second ---- s
luminous intensity ---- candela ---- cd
temperature ---- kelvin ----- K
amount of susbtance ---- mole ---- mol
electric current ---- ampere ---- A
Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.
In the SI system, there are 7 basic units. These are kilogram (mass) meter (distance) second (time) ampere (electric current) kelvin temperature) mole (amount of chemical substance) candela (luminous intensity). There are also derived SI units for other measurements such as meters per second (for speed).
The area of a triangle is (1/2) x base x height. Just replace the corresponding numbers, and do the calculation.
(22.4*10^-3)/(7*10^-2) = 0.32 kg m-3 One could argue that this is really a physics question. On a side note, the multiplying by 10's to negative powers is to convert the units to SI units, if that isn't clear. ALWAYS USE SI UNITS or else physics (or physicists) will try to kill you.
105/7 = 15 units
There are seven quantities which have base units associated with themThese Quantities can be seen as :1 . Length - meter .2. Mass - kg.3. Temperature - Kelvin .luminous Intensity - Candela.5. Electric Current - Ampere .6. Electric Current -ampere .7.amount of substance = Mole
The SI has 7 base units. These units can be combined in an almost unlimited way to form other (derived) units. The Wikipedia article on "SI derived units" lists some examples.
There are 7 base SI units and all other are defined using these 7 base units. See the related question below:[http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_all_the_SI_unitsWhat are all SI units?]
If you look at the definitions of the SI units, and especially the derived units, you'll see that all the derived units are derived from other units. It might actually be possible to have even less base units, but that would make the system of units unnecessarily confusing.
Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.
There are 7 basic units
There are 7 base SI units and all other are defined using these 7 base units. See the related question below:[http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_all_the_SI_unitsWhat are all SI units?]
the units that has not been assigned either to the fundamental units or to derived units.
The seven fundamental quantities used in chemistry are the quantities and units that include length in meters, time in seconds, mass in kilograms, temperature in Kelvin degrees, chemical amounts in moles, and electrical charge in coulomb. This measurements are given in meter or SI units.
Yes. Meter is the unit of length; it is one of the 7 SI base units.
The SI has 7 base units: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit Also, the SI has tens of derived units - perhaps hundreds of them, since you can combine the base units in many ways. Those units are ultimately derived from the 7 base units. For example, units for area, volume, speed, force, energy, pressure, electric charge, voltage, and many more, are derived from some of the base units. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_derived_unit
There are seven (7) Base SI units and many more derived SI units.The seven Base SI units are as follows:meter____ m__measure of lengthkilogram__kg__measure of masssecond___s___measure of timeKelvin____K__measure of temperaturemole_____mol measure of the amount of a substanceampere___A__measure of electrical currentcandela___cd_measure of luminous intensity (brightness)