Physics, asked by Sagnesh, 4 days ago

Ampere is fundamental unit why

Answers

Answered by shreeyag56
0

Answer:

here is your answer

Explanation:

The Ampere is actually not a fundamental unit. It is Coulombs/second, with Coulombs and seconds being the fundamental units. Other common electrical units can be derived from the non-electrical fundamental units and the Coulomb. For example, a Volt is a Joule/Coulomb, or expressed in fundamental units is a Newton-meter/Coulomb.

Answered by Johnsonmijo
0

Answer:

Ampere is a fundamental unit.

Explanation:

Fundamental units are also called base units. These units can be measured directly from a physical quantity. Derived quantities are the physical quantities that can be derived from the fundamental quantities. There are 7 fundamental units. Ampere, the SI unit of current is one among them.

Current is measured as the rate of flow of charge. But the charge is not considered as a fundamental quantity. Because it is easier to measure current directly in ampere than measuring the charge. So ampere is considered a fundamental unit.

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