Physics, asked by zoneofcreation1, 11 days ago

why ampere is fundamental unit?

Answers

Answered by riksitabhat
2

Answer:

The ampere was chosen as a base unit, because it is easily measured, whereas the coulomb is not. Interestingly, there is a move afoot to redefine the ampere (which will remain a base unit) in terms of the fundamental charge on an electron (not in terms of coulombs).

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Answered by Ayush4101
2

Answer:

One ampere current represents one coulomb of electrical charge. So from the above explanation we can say that Ampere is a fundamental unit.

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