Physics, asked by muskanhussain5062, 9 months ago

Fundamental quantities examples

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Answered by ahamedkifan123456789
0

Answer:

A fundamental unit is a unit adopted for measurement of a base quantity. A base quantity is one of a conventionally chosen subset of physical quantities, where no subset quantity can be expressed in terms of the others.

Length (meter)

Mass (kilogram)

Time (second)

Electric current (ampere)

Thermodynamic temperature (kelvin)

Amount of substance (mole)

Luminous intensity (candela)

Answered by Anonymous
0
  • The Fundamental Quantity is independent Physical Quantity that is not possible to express in other Physical Quanitity. It is used as pillars for other quantities aka Derived Quantities. In Physics, Length, Mass, Time, Electric Current, Thermodynamic Temperature, etc are examples of Fundamental Quantities.

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