English, asked by roshnaisasmal, 6 hours ago



*. How will you get the unit of a derived physical quantity?​

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Answered by gnanasudhamadhuri123
1

Answer:

Many derived quantities are measured in derived units that have their own name. Force is one example: Newton (N) is a derived unit for force, equal to kg\, m/s2. Another derived unit is Pascal (Pa) for pressure and stress, i.e., force per area. The unit of Pa then equals N/m2 or kg/ms2.

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Answered by gvharisaran
1

Answer:

Many derived quantities are measured in derived units that have their own name. Force is one example: Newton (N) is a derived unit for force, equal to kg\, m/s2. Another derived unit is Pascal (Pa) for pressure and stress, i.e., force per area. The unit of Pa then equals N/m2 or kg/ms2.

the SI system, there are seven such base units and corresponding physical quantities: meter (m) for length, kilogram (kg) for mass, second (s) for time, kelvin (K) for temperature, ampere (A) for electric current, candela (cd) for luminous intensity, and mole (mol) for the amount of substance.

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