It is a measure of mass per unit volume and is derived using measures of mass and lengths in three orthogonal dimensions.
yes it is,it is derived by cubing the fundamental unit of length
It is called a base quantity.However, the distinction between a base quantity and a derived quantity is often not clear. For example, the second and metre are meant to be the base units for time and length. But the metre itself is defined in terms of the distance travelled by light, through vacuum, in 1/299,792,458 of a second. Consequently, a metre itself can be considered a derived unit.
An area, in its simplest form is derived by multiplying together two lots of the basic quantities - lengths.
6.496 g
A uniform probability density function.
Density is not a derived unit.. It is a physical quantity and hence is a derived quantity.. the unit of density kgm-3 or gcm-3 is a derived unit because it can be expressed as the quotient of base units. In general, a unit is said to be derived if it can be expressed as the product and/or quotient of base units.
Yes, area is a derived quantity.
the differentiate between fundamental quantity and derived quantity?
derived quantity
density is defined as the quantity in mass upon quantity in volume Mass/volume= density
No, density is not a vector quantity. It is a scalar quantity that represents the mass of a substance per unit volume.
Velocity is a derived quantity. Speed is velocity without direction. Velocity is derived from distance and time.
The quantity of matter per unit volume is the density.
The quantity symbol for electric flux density is D.
It is a derived quantity.
Current is a basic quantity, measured in amperes.
The derived quantity is a quantity which has been derived from 2 or more base quantities. Example: Velocity is the rate of change of distance and is written in terms of distance divided by time which are two base quantities.