Forces are measured in Newtons, whether they are electric or of another kind.
The SI unit for force is the Newton.
The SI unit is a Newton while an Imperial unit was a pound-force (not a pound).
The force per unit area in SI units is Newton per meter squared (N/m^2). These units are the fundamental SI units. However, this can be simplified to Pascals.
In SI system, it is measured in Newton(N).
The SI has 7 base units: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit Also, the SI has tens of derived units - perhaps hundreds of them, since you can combine the base units in many ways. Those units are ultimately derived from the 7 base units. For example, units for area, volume, speed, force, energy, pressure, electric charge, voltage, and many more, are derived from some of the base units. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_derived_unit
Force has SI units of Newtons (N) and English units of pounds (lb).
The SI unit of force is the newton.
"English" and "SI" are two completely different major systems of units. -- The SI unit of force is the Newton. -- English units of force include the poundforce, ounce, stone, and ton.
The SI unit for force is the Newton.
The SI unit for force is the Newton.
The SI unit is a Newton while an Imperial unit was a pound-force (not a pound).
The force per unit area in SI units is Newton per meter squared (N/m^2). These units are the fundamental SI units. However, this can be simplified to Pascals.
In SI system, it is measured in Newton(N).
The SI unit for force is the Newton.
Force is measured by Newton. SI unit for that is N
The international (SI) unit for force is the newton.
Yes, that's the standard (SI) unit of force.