No. That principle applies for most unit conversions in the metric system, but not for all and it does not apply at all for imperial measurements.
The fundamental carrier of electric charge is the electron. The charge on one electron is 1.6021765 × 10−19 Coulomb, and is negative. Charge can't exist in any smaller quantity, and all charges are multiples of this quantity. Protons have a positive charge of the same quantity, but they stay in their respective nuclei and don't participate in the movement of charge from place to place.
false. atoms can be divided into smaller parts
When dividing a measurement in one type of unit by a measurement with the same unit, then the answer is unitless (has no new unit). Example: 6 grams divided by 3 grams is 2. Just 2. No units.
In the metric system basic units are multiplied or divided by 10 to get larger and smaller units
In the metric system basic units are multiplied or divided by 10 to get larger and smaller units
False.
No.
False
False - when converting from a larger unit to a smaller unit there will be more of them so you must multiply. What you multiply by depends upon the units, for example converting feet to inches you multiply by 12; converting pounds to ounces you multiply by 16. It is only with the metric system of units where you multiply by a power of 10 to convert a large unit to a smaller unit, for example 2.5 kg is 2500 g (multiply by 1000 or 103).
A list of multiples is a series of numbers that can be divided by 1 smaller, for example: 8, 16, 24 32, 40, 48, 56. They all go into 8.
The answer to that one is going to depend on two things:-- what unit you are converting from-- what unit you are converting to
That depends on what you are converting from. If you are converting from larger units, you multiply. If you are converting from smaller units, you divide.
You convert to a larger unit. Smaller to larger. Metre is 1000 times larger than a millimetre
It could be either, depending on whether you're converting to a larger or smaller unit.
You multiply
No, you multiply.
yes it gets bigger