Anders Ångström
The unit of frequency, hertz (Hz), is named after the physicist Heinrich Hertz. Similarly, the unit of electrical resistance, ohm (Ω), is named after the physicist Georg Simon Ohm. Another example is the unit of luminous intensity, candela (cd), named after the Polish physicist Andrzej Ciechanowski.
This unit of pressure/stress was named after French mathematician/physicist Blaise Pascal.
A bequerel is the derived SI unit of radioactive activity, named after French physicist Henri Becquerel.
The unit of electrical current, the ampere, was named after the French physicist André-Marie Ampère. Ampère is known for his contributions to the field of electromagnetism.
Hertz is a unit named after the German physicist Heinrich Hertz. The hertz (Hz) is used to measure frequency in cycles per second.
The pascal is a unit of pressure named after Blaise Pascal, the French mathematician and physicist.
Resistance is measured in ohms (Ω), named after the German physicist Georg Simon Ohm.
The derived SI unit of radioactivity named after a French physicist is the becquerel, symbolized as Bq. It is used to measure the rate of radioactive decay in a substance, with 1 becquerel equaling 1 decay per second. The unit honors Henri Becquerel, who discovered radioactivity in 1896.
Ohm is a unit of measurement for resistance. The term ohm was named after a German physicist named Georg Simon Ohm.
The unit of force, the newton, is named after Sir Isaac Newton, a famous physicist and mathematician known for his groundbreaking work in classical mechanics and gravity.
The unit of Ohms was named after the German physicist Georg Simon Ohm, known for Ohm's Law which relates the voltage across a conductor to the current flowing through it.
The unit of measurement named after Michael Faraday is the "farad," which is used to measure electrical capacitance. Faraday was a pioneering physicist and chemist known for his work in electromagnetism and electrochemistry.